News
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More
Thursday, June 25, 2026
No Result
View All Result

NEWS

3 °c
London
8 ° Wed
9 ° Thu
11 ° Fri
13 ° Sat
  • Home
  • Video
  • World
    • All
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • Latin America
    • Middle East
    • US & Canada

    Top Australian TV star to leave job after Tommy Robinson interview – reports

    Independent Australian MPs form new centrist political party

    Who is the World Cup goalscorer older than Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi?

    Mahrang Baloch, who fought for Pakistan’s disappeared men, now faces life in jail

    Europe heatwave: France, UK and Spain see record temperatures as heatwave grips western Europe

    Colombia’s left-wing presidential candidate concedes defeat

    UN nuclear chief says inspectors will visit Iran sites as part of war deal

    Freedom 250 and America250: How is the US celebrating its big birthday?

    Sydney shark attack victim wakes up from induced coma

  • UK
    • All
    • England
    • N. Ireland
    • Politics
    • Scotland
    • Wales

    The Papers: 'Never again' and 'No 10 of the north'

    Fifa World Cup: Vinicius Jr stops fun and leaves Scotland down… but are they out?

    Kylie Minogue, Quentin Tarantino, RZA spotted around Wales for film

    NI health: Consultants and specialist doctors begin strike action

    Trump describes Burnham as ‘the mayor of a town’ and ‘extremely liberal’

    People stuck on M25 in heat red alert taken to hospital

    The Papers: 'Heat engulfs UK' and 'Ghana be alright'

    World Cup 2026: Scotland v Brazil – Carlo Ancelotti’s quest for World Cup glory

    Abersoch beach hut with no power goes on sale for £200k

  • Business
    • All
    • Companies
    • Connected World
    • Economy
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Global Trade
    • Technology of Business

    Anthropic accuses Chinese rival Alibaba of illicitly extracting AI capabilities

    Elon Musk loses trillionaire status as global tech rout hits SpaceX

    The legal fight to get equal pay for Germany’s disabled workers

    Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba sues US government over defence blacklist

    Who could be the UK’s next chancellor?

    The economic challenges facing the next prime minister

    Australia’s coal and gas exports violate our human rights, group says in new UN case

    Alan Greenspan, architect of the modern American economy, dies aged 100

    Toy Story 5 scores record opening weekend for franchise

  • Tech
  • Entertainment & Arts

    Dancers say Lizzo ‘needs to be held accountable’ over harassment claims

    Freddie Mercury: Contents of former home being sold at auction

    Harry Potter and the Cursed Child marks seven years in West End

    Sinéad O’Connor: In her own words

    Tom Jones: Neighbour surprised to find singer in flat below

    BBC presenter: What is the evidence?

    Watch: The latest on BBC presenter story… in under a minute

    Watch: George Alagiah’s extraordinary career

    BBC News presenter pays tribute to ‘much loved’ colleague George Alagiah

    Excited filmgoers: 'Barbie is everything'

  • Science
  • Health
  • In Pictures
  • Reality Check
  • Have your say
  • More
    • Newsbeat
    • Long Reads

NEWS

No Result
View All Result
Home Tech

What will future aerial dogfights look like?

July 19, 2024
in Tech
9 min read
235 18
0
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


4 hours ago

By Michael Dempsey, Technology Reporter

USAF Two US Air Force F-16 combat jets fly side by side over the desert, one white and red, the other combat greyUSAF

The US Air Force has developed an AI which can fly an F-16 combat jet (left)

I’m flying a Typhoon fighter over the Irish Sea and I’ve got a big problem.

There’s a hostile jet on my tail, and no matter how I push the joystick, or play with the throttle, this enemy is still there.

The threat is represented by a black triangle on the computer screen ahead of me that also displays a Typhoon cockpit. I’m in a series of three dogfights on a simulator and the results are not good.

That annoying little image won’t leave my six o’clock position, and I lose 3-0 to the ominous black triangle.

The ace I’m up against is an AI dogfighter developed by Turkish aerospace engineers commissioned by defence giant BAE Systems.

They’ve been working on an AI co-pilot that could save a real life aviator in a dogfight, and will find its way into sophisticated warfighting simulators.

One of the engineers, Emre Saldiran, is studying at Cranfield University in the UK, which has strong aerospace links. He describes how the AI co-pilot picked up fighting tactics by a process of trial and error. “We reinforce the AI’s learning with more and more data put into the dogfight simulator.”

One of his objectives is to address the information overload fighter pilots endure. His colleague Mevlϋt Uzun assures me that AI takes a lot of learning to beat humans. “The AI made millions of mistakes. Teaching it is like guiding a child.”

But once trained the AI can offer valuable advice, according to Mr Uzun.

“The AI can tell a pilot to slow down or speed up. And it can evaluate an emerging dogfight and warn of a 70% probability the pilot will lose if they get into that fight.”

So the AI warns pilots of situations likely to end in their jet being shot down and it takes that decision in milliseconds. But the design team aren’t making any big claims about it replacing a pilot.

“It’s just a piece of code, you could run it on your phone,” says Mr Uzun. Today their program is running off a normal laptop PC.

Dr Mevlϋt Uzun  (left) in a blazer standing with Emre Saldira

Mevlϋt Uzun (left) and Emre Saldira have been working on a dogfighting AI

The US Air Force revealed its own, rather more elaborate, AI dogfighter in 2023. It was demonstrated flying an F-16 jet in combat manoeuvres.

This flight was the culmination of years of work aimed at creating an AI that could beat a living pilot.

Eight US AI companies went head to head in 2020 during a three-day competition known as the AlphaDogfight Trials Event. This involved simulated online dogfights between the competing AI programs and an experienced USAF fighter pilot.

The winning program beat the pilot repeatedly, and Brett Darcy of US defence shop Shield AI was on the three-strong team that built it.

He remembers the AlphaDogfight event vividly. “The competitors ranged from the big boys like [defence giant] Lockheed Martin down to us.”

They started out by pitching their AI pilot against a target flying straight and level, “a sitting duck” says Mr Darcy.

They progressed to fighting other AI pilots, getting the AI to think about tactics. Certain rules, such as the length of each dogfight (usually five minutes) and the maximum speed they could attain were set.

But there was no requirement to abide by USAF doctrine. “Our AI used a head-on merge with the target as an opportunity to fire guns,” he says.

This novel tactic went against accepted air fighting doctrine. The AI had learned to reject rules when it could spot a better move.

Points were awarded with each combat, the AI evolving to match successful outcomes. Multiple copies of the AI were generated by this evolution as the competing AI pilots measured up to each other’s changing tactics.

These heats left Mr Darcy’s group to oppose an experienced USAF fighter pilot wearing a VR headset that put him in the cockpit of an F-16.

Thanks to victories scored against that human pilot, Mr Darcy’s small team was invited into the government’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa), which develops technology for the US Department of Defense.

Specifically, they joined Darpa’s Air Combat Evolution (ACE) project.

When Darpa’s AI-driven F-16 took to the air it was controlled during combat by a distant descendant of the software Mr Darcy’s team wrote in 2020.

AI evolves at a startling pace. Mr Darcy says this was “a many times removed grandson of the AlphaDogfighter AI.”

Despite a bewildering rate of development AI has a long way to go. The ACE jet has a safety pilot on board for take-off and landing who can switch off the AI at any time.

USAF Two US Air Force F-16 combat jets fly side by side over the desert, one white and red, the other combat greyUSAF

In dogfights the USAF artificial intelligence used unconventional tactics

For an AI pilot to be effective it has to win a lot of trust and be able to integrate into wider forces around it.

Intriguingly Mr Darcy says a big question is how an AI pilot can “explain itself on the ground”, debriefing human controllers on its actions and motives.

The UK AI dogfighter is very thrifty compared to its US cousin. “They are teaching the AI to fly an aircraft” says Dr Uzun. “We don’t need to do that.”

Paring the project down by concentrating on combat moves alone meant the Cranfield team worked fast. “What they took weeks to do we did in two days.”

One man whose career spans the rise of digital defence tools is Michael Hull. Now a principal technologist at BAE Systems in Warton, Lancashire, he joined the business as an apprentice electronics engineer in 1990.

Dramatic changes he has witnessed, include the way innovations that once emerged from inside defence companies now travel in the other direction. “We pull technology like AI into defence from the public domain.”

So, the AI dogfighter’s frugal heritage includes air-to-air combat tactics downloaded from Wikipedia, leaving classified information well out of the picture and contributing to the pace of the project.

Mick Hull Mick Hull standing in front of a body of water with a port in the distanceMick Hull

Mick Hull says that defence firms are increasingly using civilian technology

How did the quick assembly British AI dogfighter fare against a real Top Gun?

Ben Westoby-Brooks flew Typhoons for the RAF and works for BAE Systems. He went up against the AI dogfighter and defeated it.

The AI dogfighter is no substitute for thousands of hours flying fast jets in very demanding circumstances. But it feeds into realistic online combat exercises and could reduce pilot overload in a genuine cockpit.



Source link

Tags: Aerialdogfightsfuture

Related Posts

GTA 6 will cost £70 and physical edition will contain no disc

June 25, 2026
0

Following the reveal, some fans, external questioned the point of purchasing a physical copy, if it did not contain...

Google’s YouTube settles social media addiction case with teen

June 24, 2026
0

Google's YouTube has settled a social media addiction case brought by a 15-year-old in Florida, in a fresh legal...

Millions of iCloud users could claim share of £3bn after Apple case given UK green light

June 23, 2026
0

Apple rejected the suggestion its practices are anti-competitive, saying many customers rely on third-party alternatives. Source link

  • Australia helicopter collision: Mid-air clash wreckage covers Gold Coast

    523 shares
    Share 209 Tweet 131
  • UK inflation: Supermarkets say price rises will ease soon

    515 shares
    Share 206 Tweet 129
  • Ballyjamesduff: Man dies after hit-and-run in County Cavan

    510 shares
    Share 204 Tweet 128
  • Somalia: Rare access to its US-funded 'lightning commando brigade

    508 shares
    Share 203 Tweet 127
  • Google faces new multi-billion advertising lawsuit

    508 shares
    Share 203 Tweet 127
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Australia helicopter collision: Mid-air clash wreckage covers Gold Coast

January 10, 2023

UK inflation: Supermarkets say price rises will ease soon

April 19, 2023

Ballyjamesduff: Man dies after hit-and-run in County Cavan

August 19, 2022

Stranger Things actor Jamie Campbell Bower praised for addiction post

0

NHS to close Tavistock child gender identity clinic

0

Cold sores traced back to kissing in Bronze Age by Cambridge research

0

Stonham Aspal red squirrels mark ‘fabulous conservation effort’

June 25, 2026

The Papers: 'Never again' and 'No 10 of the north'

June 25, 2026

Linkin Park: UK rapper thanks Mike Shinoda for changing her life

June 25, 2026

Categories

Science

Stonham Aspal red squirrels mark ‘fabulous conservation effort’

June 25, 2026
0

According to Natural England, external, causes for the decline include the introduction of grey squirrels from the USA and...

Read more

The Papers: 'Never again' and 'No 10 of the north'

June 25, 2026
News

Copyright © 2020 JBC News Powered by JOOJ.us

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More

Follow Us

  • Home Main
  • Video
  • World
  • Top News
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Tech
  • UK
  • In Pictures
  • Health
  • Reality Check
  • Science
  • Entertainment & Arts
  • Login

Copyright © 2020 JBC News Powered by JOOJ.us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
News
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More
  • News

    JBC News