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FROM CONCEPT TO CAPABILITY


LIFESAVING PROTECTION Using a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicle as cover, a paratrooper with the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division (1/82) fires his M4 carbine at insurgents during a firefight on June 30 in Ghazni province, Afghanistan. The MRAP Expedient Armor Program, providing Soldiers with protection from lethal threats, exemplifies how the Army harnesses scientific innovation and transitions it rapidly to Soldiers in combat. (U.S. Army photo by SGT Michael J. MacLeod, Task Force 1/82 Public Affairs)


problem in theater, and move capabilities  manages acquisition programs.


     - tant part of technology transitions, and they are largely unseen or characterized. In some cases, “knowledge products” can inform requirements and ongoing assess- ments such as an Analysis of Alternatives.       the form of Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTPs) or provide support for follow-on development, demonstrations, experimentation, and various assessments.


54


     indirect, because the research and tech- nology maturation funded by the Army and executed by industry or university partners often becomes technology engi- neered into solutions provided years later in response to competitive solicitations for systems.


As part of this characterization process, the S&T community works closely with our partners


ing and Doctrine Command to help establish new requirements when a capability is


shown to be technically


 the TTPs needed to accompany new technological solutions.


GETTING TECHNOLOGY TO SOLDIERS The Apache Block III next-generation attack helicopter is engineered with some key performance-enhancing capa- bilities


emerging in the U.S. Army Train- from technologies


developed for the improvement program. For instance, the Rotorcraft Drive System of the 21st Century Face Gear Transmis- sion technology transferred from the S&T community to the Apache Block


Army AL&T Magazine


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