Lockheed Martin and Arquimea demonstrate advanced anomaly detection for ISR platforms
Lockheed Martin’s advanced aerospace division, Skunk Works, has unveiled a new anomaly detection capability in partnership with Spanish technology firm Arquimea.
Lockheed Martin’s advanced aerospace division, Skunk Works, has unveiled a new anomaly detection capability in partnership with Spanish technology firm Arquimea.
Lockheed Martin Skunk Works and the Royal Netherlands Air Force (RNLAF) showcased the first-ever live classified data share outside the United States between an F-35 in flight and Keystone.
Lockheed Martin has named OJ Sanchez as vice president and general manager, Skunk Works, and Mike Shoemaker as vice president and general manager, Integrated Fighter Group.
In the demonstration, an F-35 flying from Lockheed Martin’s facility in Fort Worth, Texas, transmitted classified data through Skunk Works’ Open Systems Gateway (OSG).
Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works, in collaboration with NASA Aeronautics, has begun engine run testing on the X-59, marking a significant milestone in the aircraft’s development.
The Netherlands Aerospace Centre, known as Royal NLR, has entered into a strategic collaboration with Skunk Works, the advanced development arm of Lockheed Martin.
Lockheed Martin Skunk Works partnered with the University of Iowa’s Operator Performance Laboratory (OPL) to demonstrate the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in air-to-air intercept scenarios.
Lockheed Martin Skunk Works rolled out the X-59, a unique experimental aircraft designed to quiet the sonic boom, at a ceremony in Palmdale, California.