Extra Large UUV for Long-Duration Maritime Operations

The extra large Manta Ray UUV from DARPA and Northrop Grumman aims to advance capabilities with improved efficiency and autonomy, able to act without human supervision By Abi Wylie / 28 Jun 2024

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Extra Large UUV for Long-Duration Maritime Operations - image of a large UUV being lifted by a crane for transport.
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Designed in response to a request from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Northrop Grumman’s extra large unmanned underwater vehicle (XLUUV) has been successfully tested.

Subsea missions can be extremely challenging, with difficulties like low temperatures, spotty communications, high pressure, and power supply for long missions, particularly when operating far from a land base. A larger, more advanced UUV was required, with improved efficiency and autonomy, able to act without human supervision.

DARPA put out a call in 2020 for proposals to advance UUV capabilities in efficiency, energy management, fueling, power, and more for long-duration and long-range operations.

Earlier this year, Manta Ray was shipped to Southern California for in-water testing, during which it demonstrated its ability to glide, ascend, descend, turn, hover and anchor. 

It can do some of these skills autonomously, avoiding the need for on-site human logistics or a human captain. By extending the range and capabilities of XLUUVs, Manta Ray can complete missions in challenging undersea environments, while keeping researchers and other operators safe.

Northrop Grumman’s Manta Ray holds a range of benefits:

  • Saving Energy for Long Missions
  • Sizing Up with Room for Critical Payloads
  • Conducting Missions Worldwide
  • Operating Autonomously to Keep the Military Safe

Manta Ray has a unique shape and size that enables energy saving for long missions, and is classed as a gIider — a type of UUV used since the 1960s by organizations like the U.S. Navy and the NOAA for lengthy data collection missions.

Gliders only need to change buoyancy for a few minutes at the top or bottom of their path. The rest of the time, they glide forward using minimal power and energy. 

The U.S. Navy defines XLUUVs as vehicles that are too large to launch off a ship or submarine; instead, they are launched from a pier. Manta Ray’s extra-large size provides more room for power systems and critical payloads or sensors for a variety of long-range, long-duration missions.

Manta Ray is also modular, engineered to be separated into parts for easy shipping around the world, ready for assembly in the field. This allows militaries and other organizations to bring critical capabilities wherever they are needed.

Structural Engineer Hayley Sypniewski said; “Our team had to be creative and innovative to find solutions that would work for a glider UUV as big as Manta Ray. It’s not a one-to-one scale with typical glider UUVs; because of its size, we added more buoyancy engines, a bigger payload bay, an enhanced towing system and an extremely efficient and large hull system.”

Brian Theobald, principal investigator and chief engineer for Manta Ray at Northrop Grumman, commented; “A glider has a really intriguing propulsion mechanism, falling forward [with purpose] through the water all the time, both upward and downward. When Manta Ray needs to go up or down, it changes buoyancy by pumping sea water to change the weight of the vehicle.”

Joe Deane, Manta Ray program manager, added; “Manta Ray’s uncrewed capability is critical because we want to keep humans out of harm’s way during long missions in potentially dangerous environments.”

Posted by Abi Wylie Edited by Abigail Wylie, Editor and Copywriter experienced in digital media with a keen interest in ocean science technology. Connect & Contact

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