TY - GEN AB - Power and energy have become a strategic and operational imperative for both the Royal Navy and United States Navy. The 21st century pace of change is unparalleled, with threats evolving at increased range, complexity, and sophistication. State and non-state adversaries are gaining technological advances and expanding their ability to conduct combined operations. Rapid fielding and seamless integration of advanced power and energy capabilities, such as power continuity across systems and electrically-powered weapons and sensors, will be critical for allies and partners to keep pace. As energy is one of the primary drivers for enhanced warfighting capability, these capabilities will be spurred by advances in power, energy and integrated system level controls. Further, the evolution of asymmetric threats will require disruptive and technologically superior solutions that create resilient networks and operate in a fully distributed manner. AD - Herren Associates, Inc., US AD - Rolls Royce plc AD - United States Department of Navy AU - Lowe, A M AU - Voth, J M AU - Sturtevant, G H DA - 2018-10-02 ID - 7571 JF - Conference Proceedings of INEC KW - International Partnerships KW - Future Warfighting Capabilities KW - Power System Design KW - Shipbuilding L1 - https://library.imarest.org/record/7571/files/INEC%202018%20Paper%20001%20Lowe%20FINAL.pdf L2 - https://library.imarest.org/record/7571/files/INEC%202018%20Paper%20001%20Lowe%20FINAL.pdf L4 - https://library.imarest.org/record/7571/files/INEC%202018%20Paper%20001%20Lowe%20FINAL.pdf LK - https://library.imarest.org/record/7571/files/INEC%202018%20Paper%20001%20Lowe%20FINAL.pdf N2 - Power and energy have become a strategic and operational imperative for both the Royal Navy and United States Navy. The 21st century pace of change is unparalleled, with threats evolving at increased range, complexity, and sophistication. State and non-state adversaries are gaining technological advances and expanding their ability to conduct combined operations. Rapid fielding and seamless integration of advanced power and energy capabilities, such as power continuity across systems and electrically-powered weapons and sensors, will be critical for allies and partners to keep pace. As energy is one of the primary drivers for enhanced warfighting capability, these capabilities will be spurred by advances in power, energy and integrated system level controls. Further, the evolution of asymmetric threats will require disruptive and technologically superior solutions that create resilient networks and operate in a fully distributed manner. PY - 2018-10-02 T1 - Combined Seapower: A Combat Power Perspective TI - Combined Seapower: A Combat Power Perspective UR - https://library.imarest.org/record/7571/files/INEC%202018%20Paper%20001%20Lowe%20FINAL.pdf VL - INEC 2018 Y1 - 2018-10-02 ER -