Page 10 - Australian Defence Magazine Feb-Mar 2023
P. 10
10 NEWS REVIEW INDUSTRY UPDATE
FEBRUARY-MARCH 2023 | WWW.AUSTRALIANDEFENCE.COM.AU
RAN’S NEW AUV TO BE NAMED ‘GHOST SHARK’
DEFENCE
DEFENCE has named the extra-large au- tonomous undersea vehicle program (XL- AUV) being developed by Anduril Austra- lia as ‘Ghost Shark’.
The ceremony marked a significant milestone in the program, including the ar- rival of a 2.8 tonne ‘Dive-LD’ autonomous submarine. This submarine will be used by Anduril Australia engineers as a testbed vehicle for experimentation, testing and validation as it develops the XL-AUV ver- sion, which will be the size of a school bus.
The 5.8m long Dive-LD arrived ahead of schedule in a major step forward in the $140m partnership between the RAN, Defence Science and Technology Group (DSTG) and Anduril Australia to design, develop and manufacture three Ghost Shark XL-AUVs in Australia. The ambi- tious three-year Ghost Shark program will involve capability assessment and prototyping in record time.
The Dive-LD, which has a 3D printed ex- terior, can autonomously conduct missions for up to 10 days along the seafloor at up to 6,000 meters ocean depth. Like the Dive- LD, the Ghost Shark XL-AUV will be capa- ble of a wide range of deployment options.
Head of Navy Capability Rear Admiral Peter Quinn, who announced the name ‘Ghost Shark’, said it signifies that soft- ware-driven autonomous systems are a force multiplier for Defence.
“Ghost Shark will join Ghost Bat and other autonomous systems as our invest- ment in smart AI-enabled technologies come to fruition. Our recently released RAS-AI Campaign Plan includes the rapid development of combat ready pro- totypes to accelerate operational deploy- ment of game changing capabilities such as Ghost Shark,” RADM Quinn said.
Dr Shane Arnott, Senior Vice President Engineering, Anduril Industries said that
ABOVE: Dr Shane Arnott and Anduril staff pose with the ‘Dive-LD’ autonomous underwater vehicle at Anduril Australia’s Sydney Harbour base
three prototype XL-AUVs will be deliv- ered to the Royal Australian Navy over three years, with a manufacture-ready ve- hicle at the end of 2025.
“Each prototype will be iterative using agile engineering approaches; we’re not just building three of the same vehicle,” Arnott explained.
“The subsea domain is extremely com- plex and the new frontier for exploitation of autonomous technologies. With the advances we’re bringing on this program, we’ll be able to take more of the dull, dirty and dangerous missions from the crewed submarines, freeing them up to do more complex missions.”