In developing this capability, Tournear said that other organizations would be responsible for developing the sensors that will be used, the SDA will develop the transport layer that transforms the sensor data into targeting solutions and delivers it to the war fighter. Whether produced in the transport layer or on the ground, once those targeting solutions are ready and in the transport layer they will be downlinked and distributed to the war fighter through a tactical data link like Link-16 or through a ground station like Titan, explained Tournear.Īll of this will take place at lightning fast speeds, as the goal is to get targeting solutions for beyond line-of-sight ground threats to the war fighters on the battlefield in real time. The SDA did note that based on mission-partner requirements some detailed processing and data fusion will be conducted on the ground, with the resultant targeting solutions then being transmitted back up to the transport layer. Once target recognition is completed in the custody layer, data will be moved to the transport layer, where it will be fused and transformed into targeting solutions. The transport layer will be a satellite capability that facilitates the movement of data between satellites and then between satellites and the ground. That data will then be moved to the SDA’s transport layer, which Tournear called the backbone of their architecture. To achieve this, the SDA told C4ISRNET in a follow-up email that their “plan is to perform image formation and simple automatic target recognition onboard the custody satellites." Instead of just delivering images to war fighters, the goal is to deliver targeting solutions to the war fighter based on those satellite images. While Kestrel Eye simply produced images and delivered them to the war fighter, the Army needs to be able to detect and track ground level threats automatically. The small satellite experiment showed how the Army could task a sensor in LEO orbit to take images of the battlefield and then downlink them to the war fighter in real time.īut the Army wants to do more than that. Hence, the rally in its share price could be driven purely by market forces.The Army has experimented with providing real-time satellite imagery to the war fighter in recent years with its pathfinder Kestrel Eye program. The company has not made any significant announcements of late. Meanwhile, Forbes & Company Ltd climbed 4.05 per cent to trade at Rs 754.80 apiece. The ex-date for dividend disbursement is September 20, 2022. The company had announced a dividend of Rs 3.5 per equity share, representing 35 per cent of the face value of Rs 10 per equity share. Valiant Organics Ltd, another S&P BSE Smallcap company, rallied 4.37 per cent to trade at Rs 754 apiece. The ex-date for dividend disbursement is September 19, 2022. The company had announced a dividend of Re 1 per equity share, representing 10 per cent of the face value of Rs 10 per equity share. Meanwhile, Apollo Pipes, Valiant Organics, and Forbes & Company emerged as the Top Gainers of BSE in the pre-opening session today.Īpollo Pipes Ltd, an S&P BSE Smallcap company, surged 4.40 per cent to trade at Rs 544 apiece. On the sectoral front, in the pre-opening session, metals shined by 0.6 per cent, power strengthened by 0.08 per cent while auto surged 0.5 per cent. By 9.15 am, the index further strengthened to 60,464.26, signifying gains of 349.13 points or 0.58 per cent. ![]() ![]() Two of these three stocks rally ahead of their ex-dividend date next week.Īt the pre-opening bell, the frontline index S&P BSE Sensex opened in green with a gain of 66.94 points or 0.11 per cent.
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