Program Origin

The Northrop Grumman Global Hawk has its origins in the 1994 High-Altitude
Endurance Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Advanced Concept Technology Demonstrator
(HAE UAV ACTD) program initiated by the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) and Defense Airborne Reconnaissance Office (DARO).
This effort was undertaken as a reaction to the perceived excesses of
the highly classified and enormously expensive Lockheed/Boeing Advanced
Airborne Reconnaissance System (AARS) program initiated in the mid-1980s.
A loitering long-range strategic reconnaissance UAV designed to penetrate
contested airspace and carry a wide range of sensors, AARS was cancelled
in May 1993 due to cost overruns and the loss of its main mission with
the end of the Cold War.
Two distinct air vehicles and respective ground segments made up the
HAE UAV ACTD program. Global Hawk was built to the Tier II+ requirement,
which called for a conventionally configured UAV, while the Lockheed
Martin/Boeing DarkStar fulfilled the Tier III- requirement for an unconventional
low-observable UAV. DarkStar, primarily a technology demonstrator, quickly
ran into trouble when it crashed during its second takeoff. DarkStar
did not take to the air again until 26 months later, when test flights
revealed unanticipated stability problems. These performance concerns,
along with escalating costs, led to Air Force cancellation of the program
after just six flights.
In the Phase I design competition for the Tier II+ platform, five
contractors were invited to participate. This was reduced to one contractor,
Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical (now part of Northrop Grumman), after budget
cuts prior to the Phase II downselect. Very early in Phase III, Global
Hawk demonstrated notable military utility and subsequently entered
the formal acquisition process. The UAV's Common Ground Segment (CGS)
was also a success, controlling the air vehicle as well as the transmission
and dissemination of imagery.
Few aircraft have shown such utility and deployment capability so
early in flight testing. Global Hawk's autonomous high-altitude, long-duration
flight characteristics were proven, along with the capability of its
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensor to provide high-quality imagery.
Though not part of the original requirement, Global Hawk and its sensors
were also shown to be dynamically retaskable during its trials with
the Air Force's 31st Test and Evaluation Squadron. The Global Hawk effort
succeeded where DarkStar failed because it focused on the design and
construction of a practical air vehicle that was developmentally mature
enough to be transitioned into an operational weapons system.
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Program History

The first of 7 development Global Hawks flew on February 28, 1998.
The Reconnaissance Systems Program Office, Aeronautical Systems Center
at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio assumed total control of the Global Hawk
Program on October 1, 1998. The development program, made up of a series
of exercises sponsored by U.S. Joint Forces Command, showed great promise
and the pace of testing accelerated in the following year, interrupted
only by a few months delay after a Global Hawk was lost due to technical
malfunction in March 1999.
In March 2001, Global Hawk entered the Engineering, Manufacturing
and Development phase of defense acquisition. After the terrorist attacks
on September 11, development Global Hawks were rushed into operational
service for Operation Enduring Freedom; later, they served in Operation
Iraqi Freedom (see the following sections for more information on these
operations). The performance of the UAV exceeded the most optimistic
expectations, logging 3,000 flight hours during the development phase,
the majority of which were operational sorties.
On August 1, 2003, the first of 48 production vehicles was rolled
out at Northrop Grumman's Antelope Valley Manufacturing Center at Air
Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California. As of 2004, the Air Force plans
a production run of approximately 51 Global Hawks. They will be operated
by the 9th Reconnaissance Wing, based at Beale AFB in California, alongside
the venerable U-2S.
The Air Force Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force Base, California
is currently flight testing Global Hawk, with more than 1,700 hours
and more than 120 successful sorties flown.
Eglin Deployment

On April 20, 2000, Global Hawk air vehicle number 4 flew from Edwards
to Eglin AFB, Florida, to take part in the "Linked
Seas 00" and "Joint Task Force Exercise JTFEX 00-02" exercises.
The transit across the USA provided an opportunity to also demonstrate
the Global Hawk's capabilities to the US Coast Guard, which received
images of shipping activity in the Gulf of Mexico.
In the first exercise, Linked Seas 00, which ran from May 1 to 12,
Global Hawk flew northwards from Eglin along the east coast of the USA
and transmitted radar images directly to a US Army ground station in
Fort Bragg, North Carolina and to the aircraft carrier USS George Washington,
which was stationed in Norfolk, Virginia. It then continued its flight
across the Atlantic where shipping movements were monitored to the north
of the Azores. Above Portugal, the RQ-4 gathered radar images of an
amphibious landing operation near Setubal. The UAV flew back over almost
the same route and after some 28 hours airborne it was back at Eglin.
During the mission, the Global Hawk flew through three air traffic control
zones above the Atlantic. Its progress was monitored from the Joint
Warfighting Center in Suffolk, Virginia, while the data was transmitted
via RAF Molesworth in the United Kingdom to NATO's SOUTHLANT HQ, validating
that the systems worked in complex scenarios.
In the second exercise, Joint Task Force Exercise 00-02, which took
place from May 14-26, Global Hawk provided direct support for the joint
maritime mission of a Navy Carrier Battle Group and an Amphibious Ready
Group/Marine Expeditionary Unit in a littoral (land-sea) environment.
Global Hawk returned to Edwards AFB June 19, concluding the deployment
exercise demonstration program. According to US Joint Forces Command,
during the 22 individual sorties it flew in the yearlong series of joint
deployment exercises, Global Hawk proved its military worth by providing
critical intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities
to the warfighting community.
Australia Demonstration

Global Hawk Air
Vehicle 5 made aviation history on April 22-23, 2001 when it
set new records for UAV endurance during its first non-stop 7,500 mile
flight across the Pacific, flying from Edwards Air Force Base, California
to the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Base in Edinburgh, Australia.
Renamed Southern Cross II, it completed this record-breaking flight
in just 22 hours.
Along with the air vehicle, a ground station, sophisticated command
and control communications equipment, and an assessment team from the
USAF's Air Force Test and Evaluation Center (AFOTEC), Kirtland Air Force
Base, New Mexico were also sent to Australia. Global Hawk flew 11 sorties
around the country to demonstrate its unmatched standoff reconnaissance
and surveillance capabilities over the littoral environment. These sorties
included support of the Tandem Thrust military exercise in Queensland,
sorties over Australia's northwest coast, and sorties across the top
end from Cape York to Darwin and Tindal RAAF Base at Katherine in the
Northern Territory.
The Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO),
the RAAF, and the US jointly assessed the military utility of Global
Hawk, which demonstrated its interoperability between US and Australian
military systems as well as its significant potential to fundamentally
change the force structure of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) in
a cost effective way. Australian scientists, systems analysts and engineers
provided expertise and assistance to the US in the development of new
maritime and littoral surveillance capabilities for the system. Another
example of Australian technological input to the program is the ground
station, known as the Australian Ground Element (AGE), which was developed
by DSTO and industry for Australia's Defence Joint Project 129. The
AGE is designed to integrate with Global Hawk to analyze sensor data
in real time for Australian operations.
Global Hawk successfully demonstrated its potential to efficiently
and effectively search large areas to detect and classify maritime targets.
Australian officials also judged it to be useful for peacetime national
tasks, such as the detection of illegal fishing and support of national
disaster management. After six weeks of sorties, Global Hawk flew back
home to Edwards AFB. The success of the visit resulted in a four-year
agreement called Project Arrangement 13, which involves cooperation
between the RAAF, DSTO, USAF, and Northrop Grumman to develop Global
Hawk as a replacement for Australia's aging fleet of Lockheed P- 3C
Orions.
Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)

Global Hawk Air Vehicle 3 was deployed to Afghanistan and performed
the type's second full reconnaissance mission took on March 11, 2002,
in support of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF). Global Hawk provided
Air Force and joint war-fighting commanders more than 17,000 near-real-time,
high-resolution intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance images,
flying more than 60 combat missions and logging more than 1,200 combat
hours.
To keep the prototype functioning in theater, parts for Air Vehicle
3 were cannibalized from Air Vehicle 6. The aircraft-ground station
package performed impeccably, giving commanders something they had never
enjoyed before in a major war, namely a continuous wide-angle view of
the battlefield that was instantly beamed to the Air Force's Combined
Air Operations Center in Saudi Arabia. Enemy positions were then sent
to field commanders and pilots and rapidly destroyed.
Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF)

Global Hawk
flew 15 missions during Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), providing over
4,800 images. Although this represented only 3 percent of all the air-based
image collection missions flown during the war, Global Hawk generated
approximately 55 percent of all time-critical data on air defense targets.
The sole Global Hawk in theater located at least 13 surface-to-air missile
batteries, 50 SAM launchers, 300 canisters and 70 missile transporters;
it also imaged 300 tanks, 38 percent of Iraq's armored force - a remarkable
display of the vehicle's capability. The Joint Forces Air Component
Commander credited Global Hawk with accelerating the defeat of the Iraqi
Republican Guard, shortening the duration of the war and reducing casualties,
exceeding the combatant commander's expectations.
During OIF, the Air Force also developed a full "reachback" capability
for the Global Hawk, in which the UAV and its sensors were operated
remotely from Beale Air Force Base, California, reducing Global Hawk's
logistical footprint in the field by more than 50 percent. Global Hawk
crews used Internet-style chat rooms to stay in touch, literally forming
"a worldwide virtual crew." These chat rooms provided effective command
and control over a weapon system that was spread across the globe.
German Demonstration

In July of 2000, Northrop Grumman and the European Aeronautic Defence
and Space Company (EADS) signed an agreement to develop an unmanned
wide- area surveillance and reconnaissance system. The project, which
brought together the companies' respective expertise in UAV and sensor
technology, was initiated to offer a replacement for the ageing fleet
of Breguet Atlantique signals intelligence (SIGINT) aircraft of Marinefliegergeschwader
3 (MFG3) Graf Zeppelin based at Nordholz, Germany, due to be replaced
by 2008. This cooperation was followed by a bilateral project agreement
between the US Air Force and the German Ministry of Defence signed in
October 2001.
On July 23, 2002, US Air Force and German Ministry of Defense officials
completed preliminary compatibility testing of EADS' electronic intelligence
(ELINT) payload with Global Hawk at the Integrated Systems facility
in San Diego, California. The first successful demonstration of the
ELINT sensor payload aboard Global Hawk took place on November 17 and
22 at Edwards AFB. During the missions, the sensor was able, for the
first time, to detect radar transmissions from emitters located at the
Naval Air Warfare Center, China Lake, California. The transmissions
were sent through a line-of-sight communications link to a temporary
German ground support station located at the Air Force flight test center
at Edwards.
With the successful integration of the EADS' ELINT payload into Global
Hawk, Northrop Grumman undertook a series of demonstration flights in
Germany for the German Ministry of Defense (MoD) in Fall 2003. On October
15, the first prototype RQ-4 Block 10 performed a 20-hour, 53-minute transatlantic
flight from Edwards AFB, California to the naval airbase at Nordholz
to demonstrate the technical feasibility of using UAVs to perform HALE
wide-area surveillance (WAS) missions. Global
Hawk was based at Nordholz from October 15 to November 6, 2003,
during which time it performed six demonstration flights over the North
Sea for a total of 29 hours flight time. The European ELINT sensor enabled
Global Hawk to detect and classify electromagnetic signals from aircraft,
ships and land based systems, determining the type of radar emanating
from each, while relaying the information via a UHF data link to an
EADS ground station. These flights represented the first successful
operation of a UAV in controlled European airspace, paving the way for
further developments of unmanned flight in Europe.
The test program led to a decision by the German MoD to develop and
produce a Global Hawk-derived sensor platform called EuroHawk
to satisfy its HALE WAS mission requirements. EuroHawk will be based
on the RQ-4 Block 20/30/40 model Global Hawk and carry an EADS-developed sensor package.
This promising Global Hawk derivative is discussed further in the Emerging
UAV Missions International Overview section below.
Advanced Information Architecture (AIA)

On October 24, 2003, Northrop Grumman successfully conducted the first
communication between Global Hawk and a manned airborne battle management
platform in the skies above Edwards AFB. The company-funded event demonstrated
a new architectural concept called the Advanced Information Architecture
(AIA), which allows Global Hawk imagery and other mission-critical data
to be rapidly disseminated in theater among battle managers, ground
troops and other tactical users. Northrop Grumman used the AIA concept
to share imagery among Global Hawk, a test bed E-8C Air Force Joint
Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (Joint STARS), and several ground
users equipped with tactical man-pack radios and laptop computers.
Northrop Grumman's AIA concept provides a faster, simpler alternative
to the expensive, bandwidth-intensive process used in recent conflicts,
such as Operation Iraqi Freedom, to download Global Hawk image data
to U.S.-based ground stations, analyze it, then push it back into theater
on demand. It will allow tactical users on the ground or in the air
to select and download mission-critical data directly from a network
of high-capacity servers on Global Hawk and other in-theater platforms.
Using narrowband, "line-of-sight" air-to-air or air-to-ground UHF
communications links, users could elect to receive just the data needed
for a specific mission, thereby minimizing bandwidth requirements. If
the queried platform did not have the requested data, its server would
poll other servers in the network to obtain and deliver the data to
the original requestor. The AIA concept would effectively extend a user's
"line of sight" to the most geographically distant platform in the network.
To demonstrate the concept, Northrop Grumman's test team developed
and installed on Global Hawk a new 1.4 terabyte (1500 gigabyte) computer
server capable of storing all of the imagery and sensor data recorded
during a complete Global Hawk mission. Fifteen hundred gigabytes equals
the storage capacity of approximately 50 desktop personal computers.
The company also set up a secure, wireless local area network between
Global Hawk and Joint STARS using hardware provided by Harris Corporation;
and installed client software that allowed tactical users with UHF radios
to query and receive information from Global Hawk.
With Global Hawk orbiting in the skies 64,500 feet above Edwards Air
Force Base and Joint STARS patrolling 100 miles away, battle managers
on board Joint STARS queried and received, from Global Hawk, images
and navigational data from the UAV's most recent mission. The imagery
was also relayed by a satellite communications link to Northrop Grumman's
Crew Area Virtual Environment in Melbourne, Florida, a 40-foot-long,
company-funded mockup of a Boeing 767-400R fuselage configured as an
airborne battle management center. Following the exchange, ground users
at Edwards Air Force Base and a Northrop Grumman facility in El Segundo,
California, used their tactical, line-of- sight UHF radios to query
and receive recently recorded images directly from Global Hawk's server.
A tactical radio integrated with Global Hawk's server enabled the proper
"handshake" between Global Hawk and the ground users.
Planned Demonstrations

US Navy - Global Hawk Maritime Demonstration (GHMD)
The US Navy has ordered two Global Hawks to serve as testbeds for
the development, integration and testing of future maritime UAV sensors
and payloads, as well as helping to establish a concept of operations
for their use. These are scheduled to participate in the Global
Hawk Maritime Demonstration (GHMD) beginning in 2005. The GHMD
program is intended to develop maritime UAV tactics and operating procedures.
Lessons learned from GHMD will be applied to future naval UAV systems.
This system will provide the Navy with an enduring test bed to evaluate
new technologies; to support fleet experiments and exercises; and to
provide a contingency operational capability to support deployed Navy
and Marine Corps forces.
The Navy Global Hawks are designed with features specifically tailored
to maritime missions, including new radar modes for detecting and identifying
ships at sea, as well as passive sensors capable of picking up hostile
radars. The ground stations are also modified, adding displays and controls
needed to allow operators to analyze sensor information in real time
and without external assistance.
The first air vehicle, dubbed N-1, made its premiere flight on October 6, 2004, flying from the company's Palmdale, Calif., production facility to the Birk Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. A joint U.S. Navy, U.S. Air Force and contractor team began testing the air vehicle in preparation for its delivery to the Navy. That 10 hour ferry flight to Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md., was successfully completed on March 28, 2006. The second air vehicle made its maiden flight on June 7, 2005. The Navy will operate both vehicles from NAS Patuxent River. Although based at PAX, the system will be moved and deployed to other locations to support exercises or deployed contingency operations.
Domestic Overview

US Coast Guard (USCG) Integrated Deepwater System (IDS) Program
To continue to meet America's 21st century maritime threats and challenges,
the Coast Guard initiated the IDS Program, the largest and most innovative
acquisition in the Coast Guard's history. The IDS is an integrated approach
to upgrading existing assets while transitioning to newer, more capable
platforms with improved C4ISR and innovative logistics support. This
new "system of systems" will significantly contribute to the Coast Guard's
maritime domain awareness, as well as the improved ability to intercept,
engage, and deter those activities that pose a direct challenge to U.S.
sovereignty and security. In June 2002, the IDS contract was awarded
to Integrated Coast Guard Systems (ICGS), a joint venture between Northrop
Grumman and Lockheed Martin. When complete, the interoperable IDS system
will include three classes of new cutters and their associated small
boats, a new fixed-wing manned aircraft fleet, a combination of new
and upgraded helicopters, and both cutter-based and land- based UAVs.
All of these highly capable assets will be linked with C4ISR systems,
and are supported by an integrated logistics regime.
A modified Global Hawk is being offered to fulfill the requirement
for a high- altitude, long-endurance land-based UAV, providing operational
Coast Guard commanders with high-resolution, near real-time imagery
of large geographic areas. Its advanced technology sensors, a 1,900-pound
reconfigurable payload bay, and the ability to remain in flight for
long periods will provide commanders with important new capabilities
to obtain the intelligence needed to achieve information dominance in
the ever-changing maritime domain.
Global Hawk's 10,000-nautical-mile range and 32 hour endurance, combined
with satellite and line-of-sight communication links to other air and
surface platforms and operation centers ashore, will permit wide-area
surveillance and monitoring operations. High-resolution sensors that
can look through adverse weather at day or night from an altitude of
60,000 feet can conduct surveillance over an area roughly the size of
Illinois in just 24 hours.
International Overview

EuroHawk
EuroHawk
is a Global Hawk derivative equipped with a new signals intelligence
system sensor being offered by Northrop Grumman and EADS to the German
MoD. Global Hawk demonstrated its ability to satisfy the MoD HALE wide
area surveillance requirement during tests at Nordholz, Germany in Fall
2003, where it flew 6 successful sorties equipped with an EADS-developed
ELINT sensor.
To deploy an independent German SIGINT surveillance and reconnaissance
system by 2008, the German MoD has requested that a proposal on EuroHawk
be delivered by midyear, 2004. Northrop Grumman and EADS are on schedule
for the proposal delivery are expecting to get parliamentary approval
by the end of this year. The first prototype delivery is scheduled for
mid 2007, with contract approval for series production and initial operational
capability expected mid 2008. This schedule will ensure an on-time replacement
for the ageing fleet of SIGINT equipped Breguet Atlantiques currently
in service.
Another significant milestone in the EuroHawk programme was the founding
of a joint venture between Northrop Grumman and EADS. This new company,
which will be based in Germany, will be tailored to the customer's requirements
and act as the national prime contractor for the German MoD through
the entire lifecycle of the system. A related agreement to guarantee
necessary technology and information transfer between Germany and the
US is currently being defined by the two governments.
AGS
A mixed fleet of Global Hawks and Airbus A321s will make up the core
of the NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) system. AGS provides
an essential enabling capability for the NATO Response Force and will
provide Alliance political decision-makers and military planners with
an invaluable "Eye in the Sky" with which to gather critical information
on what is happening on the ground during peacetime, crisis or war.
The core will be supplemented by interoperable national assets as part
of a broader Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) system-of-systems.
The AGS system will be produced by the Transatlantic Industrial Proposed
Solution (TIPS), a consortium made up of Northrop Grumman, EADS, Galileo
Avionica, General Dynamics Canada, Indra, and Thales. NATO awarded the
TIPS contract on April 16, 2004.
NATO's decision takes a major step forward in fielding an operationally
essential capability for Alliance forces that will be a building block
for NATO's network- enabled capability, an important element of NATO
transformation. Building on legacy systems and lessons learned from
real world operations, TIPS will meet NATO's intelligence, surveillance
and reconnaissance and command and control requirements for the 21st
century.
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