Military Embedded Systems
 
 
 
 
 
 
This edition is sponsored by
 
Pentek
ACCES I/O
Elma Electronic
Crutiss-Wright
 
 
 
 
SPECIAL REPORT
EMMA HELFRICH, ASSOCIATE EDITOR
 
The U.S. military is quickly realizing that modernization efforts for RF [radio frequency] and microwave components are necessary in order to keep pace with advancing adversaries, and major component suppliers are ready for the challenge.
 
 
 
 
 
Curtiss-Wright
 
 
SISTER PUBLICATION
RICK HEARN CURTISS-WRIGHT DEFENSE SYSTEMS, MICHAEL SLONOSKY CURTISS-WRIGHT DEFENSE SOLUTIONS, GEOFFREY WATERS NXP SEMICONDUCTORS, LISA SARAZIN CURTISS-WRIGHT DEFENSE SYSTEMS
 
In recent years, Arm processors have made a quiet, understated entry into the military/aerospace market. With a well-established reputation in commercial markets for bringing high performance to low-power mobile devices – such as smartphones, tablets, and wearables – it’s no surprise that Arm’s potential was recognized in an industry where size, weight, and power (SWaP) constraints heavily influence technology selection.
 
 
 
 
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Elma Electronic
 
Elma Electronic
 
Development Platform & SOSA™ Ecosystem
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Curtiss-Wright
 
Curtiss-Wright Defense Solutions
 
NVIDIA® Quadro® Turing™ TU104/106 GPGPU Processor Modules for ISR/EW and AI Applications
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Pentek
 
Pentek
 
6.4 GHz A/D and D/A 3U VPX Module for Wideband Defense, Radar and Communication Applications
 
 
 
 
 
Rick Hearn-Akumal2 (2).jpg
GUEST BLOG
JOE BRAND, FUTURA
 
As security threats continue to grow and undermine the trust in systems performing critical operations, the ability to detect and prevent changes to vital system components is necessary to maintain system integrity. In order to get ahead of these threats, organizations need to deploy hardware roots of trust to monitor and defend critical systems. Hardware roots of trust use encryption and digital-signature technology to ensure only legitimate changes are made to system components.
 
 
 
 
 
5c77ee741199f-Nick+Butler+head+shot.jpg
 
 
MIL TECH TRENDS
DAVID JEDYNAK, CURTISS-WRIGHT DEFENSE SOLUTIONS
 
As the amount of signal-processing data used in defense applications continues to grow, the challenge for system architects becomes less about hardware design and more about what to do with all that data, and how. Because commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) solutions can now be used to move the data, the system designer can better focus on what they are going to do with that data and concentrate on solving their higher-level problems.
 
 
 
 
 
Kognitiv Spark
SISTER PUBLICATION
JERRY GIPPER, EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
 
It has been several years since the introduction of a new mezzanine form factor for low-profile applications. The VITA membership has been doing some soul-searching to determine what should be next. Plenty of controversy is in the air, with everything from simple right-angle edge connections and optical links to the carrier being thrown into the fray.
 
 
 
 
 
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Pixus Technologies
 
Pixus Technologies
 
SOSA-Ready Development Enclosures & OpenVPX Chassis Manager
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
X-ES
 
Extreme Engineering Solutions (X-ES)
 
Extreme Engineering Solutions’ XPedite7683 is an Intel® Xeon® D-1500 Processor-Based 3U VPX Module with 32 GB of DDR4, XMC Support, and SecureCOTS™
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Annapolis Micro Systems
 
Annapolis Micro Systems
 
Ultra-Low Latency DRFM-Optimized Mezzanine Cards
 
 
 
 
 
Curtiss-Wright
SPECIAL REPORT
DONALD VANDERWEIT, KEYSIGHT TECHNOLOGIES
 
A newly developed method to test satellite signals based on spectral correlation can produce better test results, as the traditional noise power ratio (NPR) test can overstate distortion during actual operation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Raytheon
MIL TECH TRENDS
SALLY COLE, SENIOR EDITOR
 
Ground-based radars are currently undergoing modernization, and a space-based layer of sensors is under development to help defend against ongoing threats posed by ballistic missiles and a newer one in the form of hypersonic weapons.
 
 
 
 
 
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
ACCES I/O
 
ACCES I/O Products
 
mPCIe-DIO Series: PCI Express Mini Cards for Easy and Flexible Digital I/O Expansion
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Pico Electronics
 
Pico Electronics
 
Miniature Transformers & Inductors
 
SPONSORED PRODUCT
Pico Electronics
 
Pico Electronics
 
Ultra Miniature Converters
 
 
 
 
 
Pentek
SPONSORED WHITE PAPER
PENTEK
 
In order to fully appreciate the benefits of Software Defined Radio, conventional analog receiver and transmitter systems will be compared to their digital counterparts, highlighting similarities and differences.

The inner workings of the Software Defined Radio will be explored with an in-depth description of the internal structure and the devices used. Finally, some actual board- and system-level implementations and available off-the-shelf SDR products and applications based on such products will be presented.
 
 
 
 
 
Elma Electronic
 
 
SPONSORED WHITE PAPER
ELMA ELECTRONIC
 
The addition of apertures to the VITA 65 slot profiles has created a revolution in the types of available products, namely simplifying the configuration of the chassis and improving reliability. The flexible arrangements of contacts enabled by VITA 65 will help defense system integrators reduce size, weight, and power (SWaP) and improve interoperability.
 
 
 
 
 
Curtiss-Wright
SPONSORED WHITE PAPER
CURTISS-WRIGHT
 
The tri-services memo issued by the U.S. Army, Air Force, and Navy makes it clear that the need to rapidly share information from machine to machine requires common standards, and that these initiatives are no longer optional – they are vital and they are mandatory. Our white paper explores the benefits of an open standards approach and examines the open standards listed in the tri-services memo, such as OMS/UCI, SOSA, FACE, and VICTORY.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Webcast
 
 
Sponsored by: Annapolis Micro Systems, Elma Electronic, Kontron, Pentek
Expert Speaker: Dr. Ilya Lipkin, Steering Committee Chair, Sensor Open Systems Architecture (SOSA) Consortium, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center (AFLCM).
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