JCTD program The Global Observer Joint Capabilities Technology Demonstration (JCTD) program had the goal of helping solve the capability gap in persistent ISR and communications relay for the
US military and homeland security. The Global Observer JCTD demonstrated a new stratospheric, extreme endurance UAS that could be transitioned for post-JCTD development, extended user evaluation, and fielding. The program was a joint effort with the
U.S. Department of Defense,
Department of Homeland Security, and AeroVironment that started in September 2007, to culminate in a Joint Operational Utility Assessment (JOUA) in 2011. The program provided for the system development, production of two aircraft, development flight testing, and JOUA with ISR and communications relay payload. The flight testing and JOUA was conducted at the Air Force Flight Test Center at
Edwards Air Force Base, California. The primary objectives of the Global Observer JCTD Program were: • Develop enabling technologies for a liquid hydrogen powered Global Observer UAS. • Design, build, and demonstrate the Global Observer UAS for a 5 - 7 day endurance for altitude missions with 380-pound, 2.8 kW payload capacity. The system had to be capable of being transported by a C-130 aircraft. • Integrate and assess military utility of modular Global Observer payloads to address user identified gaps in ISR and communications relay. • Evaluate system life cycle costs.
JCTD sponsors • U.S. Department of Defense • United States Special Operations Command • United States Strategic Command • U.S. Department of Homeland Security • U.S. Air Force • U.S. Army • U.S. Coast Guard • U.S. Defense Threat Reductions Agency
Flight test partners • Air Force Flight Test Center • NASA Dryden Flight Research Center
Mission possibilities High-altitude, long endurance
unmanned aerial vehicles, such as Global Observer, may enable several capabilities that enable rapid and effective actions or
countermeasures: •
Communications relay. Durable, satellite-like, affordable communications relay with substantial bandwidth capacity can interconnect and route data in real time, enabling teams and command centers separated by topographical barriers to communicate with each other. •
Disaster response. Hurricane, storm tracking and general weather monitoring may be useful in evacuation planning, relief operations and first response coordination. Global Observer provides communication alternatives in the event of cell tower, microwave relay and satellite downlink failure. •
Maritime surveillance. Coastlines plagued by transport of illegal goods can be subject to long-term surveillance. Analysts can observe suspicious activity, determine patterns of behavior and identify threats. ==History==