Hypersonic weapon contract won by Lockheed Martin
NewsAugust 14, 2018
ARLINGTON, Va. U.S. Air Force officials tasked Lockheed Martin Missiles & Fire Control to begin designing a second hypersonic weapon prototype for the Air-Launched Rapid Response Weapon (ARRW) effort.
The contract covers the critical design review, test, and production readiness support for the ARRW. The cost of the contract can't exceed $480 million.
"We are going to go fast and leverage the best technology available to get hypersonic capability to the warfighter as soon a possible," says Secretary of the Air Force Heather A. Wilson.
The ARRW effort is one of two hypersonic weapon prototyping efforts being pursued by the Air Force to accelerate hypersonic research and development. The Air Force is using rapid prototyping authorized by Section 804 of the FY16 National Defense Authorization Act to explore the art-of-the-possible and to advance these technologies to a capability in 2021.
Department of Defense (DoD), Missile Defense Agency (MDA), Air Force, Navy, and Army officials collectively signed a memorandum of agreement June 28 to work cooperatively on hypersonic boost glide technology development. "The Joint Team requires the right mix of agile capabilities to compete, deter and win across the spectrum of competition and conflict," says Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David L. Goldfein. "We must push the boundaries of technology and own the high ground in this era of great power competition and beyond."
This undefinitized contract action allows the government to meet urgent needs by authorizing the contractor to begin work before reaching a final settlement on contract terms and conditions, to include a final negotiated price, Air Force officials report. The contract is expected to be definitized within 180 days of award.
The Air Force's other hypersonic weapon rapid prototyping effort is called the Hypersonic Conventional Strike Weapon (HCSW). The ARRW and HCSW efforts are developing capabilities for the warfighter and each has different technical approaches. The ARRW effort is "pushing the art-of-the-possible" by leveraging the technical base established by the Air Force/DARPA partnership. The HCSW effort is using mature technologies that have not been integrated for an air-launched delivery system.
The Armament Directorate of the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center is providing program management of these prototyping efforts.