Mercury Computer Systems Announces $2.7 Million Production Order from General Atomics Aeronautical Systems for Predator UAS Upgrade

Mercury reaches 11-year milestone in providing the high-performance signal processing capability for the most combat-proven UAS in the world

Mercury Computer Systems announced it received a $2.7 million production order from General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI, www.ga-asi.com) to provide RACE++ Series rugged computing modules for the Predator unmanned aircraft system (UAS) Lynx Block 20 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) technology upgrade.Predator UAS (Unmanned Aircraft System)  The Predator UAS (unmanned aircraft system) employs the Lynx family of SAR reconnaissance and surveillance systems, along with Mercury’s signal processing modules. As the most combat-proven unmanned aircraft system in the world, the Predator UAS provides continuous and persistent armed reconnaissance and battlefield support to ground troops. The picture-quality imagery provided by the Lynx radar would not be possible without Mercury’s reliable, scalable, high-performance computing modules and interconnect technology.

Since 1998, Mercury has continued to provide its scalable RACE Series and RACE++ Series computing modules and software to enable high-performance signal processing for multiple generations of GA-ASI's Lynx SAR product line. The Lynx family of SAR reconnaissance and surveillance systems, along with Mercury's signal processing modules, are installed on a variety of Predator series UAS. As the most combat-proven unmanned aircraft system in the world, the Predator UAS provides continuous and persistent armed reconnaissance and battlefield support to ground troops.

The Lynx Block 20 radar upgrade is an extension of a production run requested by the U.S. Air Force and will bring the number of signal processing computing modules that Mercury has provided to GA-ASI to more than one thousand.

"GA-ASI's world-class family of Lynx SAR systems and Predator UAS continues to be deployed extensively on reconnaissance and surveillance missions, bringing all-weather, very-high-resolution imagery to the warfighter. The picture-quality imagery provided by the Lynx radar would not be possible without Mercury's reliable, scalable, high-performance computing modules and interconnect technology," said Brian Hoerl, Vice President of Worldwide Sales for Advanced Computing Solutions at Mercury. Our processor upgrades enable the Lynx radar to continue to give the warfighter leading-edge performance within the current size, weight, and power constraints of the UAS. This is yet another demonstration of how our technology road map has enabled customers to seamlessly upgrade their system performance and accelerate their embedded computing applications."

For more information on Mercury's comprehensive, cost-effective image, sensor, and signal processing solutions, visit www.mc.com, or contact Mercury at (866) 627-6951 or info@mc.com.