DARPA eyes secret new sniper rifle scope that measures and compensates for crosswinds

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gunsmith

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I guess it's not much of a secret any more!
http://mae.pennnet.com/display_arti...that-measures-and-compensates-for-crosswinds/

DARPA eyes secret new sniper rifle scope that measures and compensates for crosswinds

By John Keller

ARLINGTON, Va., 4 Jan. 2007. The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in Arlington, Va., is asking the electro-optics industry to design an advanced sniper rifle targeting scope that helps compensate for crosswinds and enables snipers to hit their targets with the first shot.
DARPA issued a broad agency announcement (BAA07-03) Dec. 24 for the Advanced Sighting System (One-Shot) program to enable snipers to hit targets accurately with the first round, under crosswind conditions, at the maximum effective range of the weapon. The standard U.S. Army Remington M24 sniper's rifle has a published maximum range of nearly half a mile.

Only companies that have classified secret facility and safeguarding clearances will be allowed to work on this program. Companies that do not have both of these clearances must team with an organization that does if they want to participate.

The Advanced Sighting System (One-Shot) must provide a measure of downrange crosswind and range to target. The system then will use the information to compensate the bullet trajectory to achieve a substantially increased success of kill, DARPA officials say.

Researchers over the last decade have tried to measure crosswinds in two ways: laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV) and coherent Doppler lidar. DARPA officials point out that these techniques may be useful for some applications, but do not seem to be adequate for this application.

Companies interested in working on the program may consider any potential sensor technology, individually or in combination. DARPA cautions, however, that U.S. forces need this kind of technology quickly and affordably, which lends itself to mature technologies.

The system must operate over a range of visibilities, atmospheric turbulence, and environmental operating conditions. The system ultimately developed will have performance that will be classified.

The development work will be conducted in two phases. First, the contractor chosen must demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed solution. Second, the successful contractor will build a prototype of a size, weight, and power consumption sufficient for battlefield use.

U.S. military officials say they are not satisfied with current methods to compensate the bullet trajectory under adverse combat conditions since they require the sniper to use a spotter to guide him by observing wind velocity and direction, determine the severity of misses, and guess the range to target. Current methods also make intense field training necessary.

Typically for long-range shots, snipers would benefit from the ability to profile the downrange wind instead of measuring an average value since wind can change at various points along the range, which could increase the overall measurement time duration.

The Advanced Sighting System must be able not only to enhance accuracy in a given measurement period and in several profiled wind segments over the engagement range, but also to consider topography, pressure, and temperature.

The system, at minimum, must have sensing and display elements integrated with a rifle or spotter's scope.

Companies interested in participating in the Advanced Sighting System project must respond to DARPA by 5 Feb., although this broad agency announcement will remain open until December 2007.

Send questions about this program by e-mail to Deepak Varshneya at [email protected]. More information is available online at www.darpa.mil/sto/solicitations/oneshot/index.htm.
 
Sign me up, I want one. Of course I hope it has the ability to compensate for interior ventalation systems too for those long shots inside the Mall LOL. Ok enough mall ninja references.
 
Confucius say:

Calculating crosswind at the scope easy. Calculating crosswind of the entire distance to the target very hard.
 
Sounds like one of the Really Good Idea things they'd come up on the Ghost in the Shell Stand Alone Complex series.

Guy had a sniper rifle with a scope that had a satellite downlink, showed the crosswinds between him and the target as a color-shift bent-patterns overlay with the colors indicating speed.
 
You know...anytime DARPA contracts out for these things to a private sector it costs millions...I'd say 80 million to get this scope..but I'm pulling numbers out my butt.
 
OK.

The device is called a "radio".

You use it to call in an airdrop of self righting wind socks, dropped every 50 yards in a line towards the target.

The shooter then observes the which way the socks are pointing, and how high they fly to determine direction and velocity of wind, and performs a sum over vectors computation to determine how much windage to apply.

:neener:
 
You use it to call in an airdrop of self righting wind socks, dropped every 50 yards in a line towards the target.

In an urban setting? Or for covert operations? I think an Evil Dictator would notice an aircraft in their airspace dropping festive little airsocks...
 
Confucius say:

Calculating crosswind at the scope easy. Calculating crosswind of the entire distance to the target very hard.

Confucius had got it right. IMHO, it's an effort in futility, and the money would be better spent in training to read the wind.

Don
 
Sure... And I'd like a small car that will not fold up in a crash, that can do 120mph while getting 35+ mpg and carrying a pallet of drywall. (up a hill with the AC on!)
 
Why do I get the feeling that this is going to be applied to robotics and not humans. Considering DARPA's unmanned vehicle competitions a scope of this nature makes more sense mounted to a robot-controlled rifle than a live one.
 
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