Networks & Digital Warfare

Northrop releases new software, hardware ‘ecosystem’ aimed at CJADC2-style integration

In addition to software systems, Northrop exec Jenna Paukstis told Breaking Defense the new line includes physical hardware components like open system processors, multifunction apertures and modules that can be plugged into both new and legacy platforms manufactured by anyone.

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Hardware components of Northrop Grumman’s NG InSight suite of integration and communication products. (Carley Welch / Breaking Defense)

AFA 2024 — Northrop Grumman says it has developed a new product line, coined NG InSight, that it’s calling a “modular ecosystem” of software and hardware designed to connect, well, just about everything.

“So the key is really integrating across different domains, services, partner nations, so it brings together capabilities,” Jenna Paukstis, vice president of the networked solutions division at Northrop, told Breaking Defense on the sidelines of the Air, Space and Cyber Conference Monday.

Paukstis said the new line, which is essentially a system of systems, includes physical hardware components like open system processors, multifunction apertures and modules that can be plugged into both new and legacy platforms manufactured by anyone, not just Northrop.

These hardware components can go on airborne platforms, ground-based terrestrial systems, maritime systems and some of the cryptologic and advanced intelligence capabilities which are part of smaller components, can go into space on payloads, she added.

On the software side, the product line includes tech dedicated to signals intelligence, communications, networking and other non-kinetic effects like electronic warfare capabilities, which Paukstis said can operate in a secure, “resilient” manner, allowing for information sharing in contested and congested environments.

“Now the Air Force, ground and maritime forces, if they can rely on high-speed, low-latency connectivity from space, what missions can they now do with that connectivity?” Pauksitis asked. “So now you can get access to critical data when and where you need it in a secure and adaptable setting.”

These software components also serve both defensive and offensive purposes. Offensively, NG InSight is capable of non-kinetic effects that are “essential for disrupting, deceiving or neutralizing adversarial capabilities, allowing forces to weaken enemy operations while protecting friendly assets,” a Northrop press release read.

On defense, the release says the ecosystem enables “the rapid interception, processing and analysis of adversaries, providing critical intelligence that can shape battlefield outcomes with speed and precision.”

For all Northrop says the family of systems can do, Paukstis highlighted its flexibility as a selling point.

“So you can think about developing this product line of capabilities that you can then reuse, which helps with the speed. It also helps with affordability. But of course, every customer needs it slightly different, right? So you can put that together and tailor it based on their mission needs.”

The US military has long sought simpler ways to connect countless assets around the world, a key demand of its sprawling Combined Joint All-Domain Command and Control (CJADC2) program, which works to create an all-seeing, all-connected battle network. Northrop is positioning NG InSight as a one-stop shop solution for CJADC2’s “information layer.”

“To achieve CJADC2 we have to seamlessly integrate 4th and 5th generation platforms and be able to communicate across services and domains with a focus on speed and scalability,” a Northrop spokesperson said in an email to Breaking Defense. “NG InSight does just that — we increase the ability to ‘Fight Tonight’ by rapidly upgrading existing platforms with near-term technology enhancements for electronic warfare, communications, networking, geolocation, targeting and multifunction sensors.”

PHOTOS: AFA 2024

PHOTOS: AFA 2024

The Israeli firm Rafael came to AFA 2024, here displaying its ice Breaker "5th-gen long-range autonomous precision strike weapon system." (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Elta, a subsidiary of Israeli firm IAI, displayed the ELL-8222SB, an airborne electronic jamming pod, at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Air, Space & Cyber Conference. Keynote Address: One Air Force. Gen. David W. Allvin, Chief of Staff of the Air Force. September 16, 2024. (Mike Tsukamoto/ Air & Space Forces Magazine)
This curious contraption at one end of the AFA 2024 hall is Resonant Sciences's RAZR, a "high performing, fieldable, robotic system for close-range multi-spectral measurments of aircraft and aircraft components such as radomes, surfaces and edges," the company says. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
General Dynamic, a company that makes some seriously large platforms, comes the suitcase-sized Tactical Cross Domain Solutions system, or TACDS, on display at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Intellisense Systems' offerings at AFA 2024 included the LAD-2008 cockpit display system, as a virtual pilot banked left. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
General Electric went chromed out with its display of an F110 Turbofan engine at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Looking especially sharp, Amentum's MULE UAV hung above visitors' heads at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
iPerformX invited attendees at AFA 2024 to sit in its F-35 simulator to get a feel for the next-gen stealth fighter. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
A patch is shown on an airman's uniform for the service's ABMS effort. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Honeywell offers an x-ray view of its F124 engine at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
A Ghost Robotics Vision 60 Q-UGV stands on all fours at the ready at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Marvin Group displays what it calls a common armament test set, or MTS-209, at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
At AFA 2024, Verdego Aero showed off its VH-3-185 Hybrid Electric Aircraft Powerplant. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Alaska Defense extends a mobile lighting platform at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Anduril's Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) on display at AFA. (Valerie Insinna/Breaking Defense)
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc's CCA on display at AFA 2024 (Valerie Insinna/Breaking Defense)
GA-ASI's XQ-67A OBSS on display at AFA 2024 (Valerie Insinna/Breaking Defense)
A couple aerial platforms from Europe's MBDA on dsiplay at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Blue Halo shows off a family of quadcopters to be used on mobile missions with its truck-based command post at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
A model of Airbus's Arrow satellite playload at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
A seat for getting out of Dodge, Martin-Baker's F-35 ejection seat is shown at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Anduril's Barracuda family of munitions at the company's stand at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
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