Raytheon moves forward on DARPA Persistent Close Air Support program
Raytheon is moving forward with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency  on the agency's Persistent Close Air Support (PCAS) program, whose software  could enable ground troops to receive close air support sooner by improving  coordination among joint terminal attack controllers, airborne sensors and  weapons. Originally designed for the A-10 Thunderbolt, the recently expanded PCAS  program intends to now develop a platform- and sensor-agnostic electronics suite  that can be easily integrated onto multiple platforms. During the current 12-month phase 2 effort, Raytheon is maturing the PCAS  program from preliminary design to a critical design review, with an option for  phase 3. The PCAS Phase 2 contract was awarded in Raytheon's fourth quarter of 2012  and modified in the third quarter of 2013. The phase 3 PCAS contract is expected  to include an 18-month, $25 million effort culminating in a series of flight  tests and live-fire demonstrations.
 
 
 
