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Brave1

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(Redirected from Ratel S)

Brave1 is a Government of Ukraine platform to bring together innovative companies with ideas and developments that can be used in the defense of Ukraine, launched on 26 April 2023.[1]

Utilising inventive ideas and the skills of people to create almost anything that will help Ukraine avoid losses and injuries to its forces and/or inflict losses on its enemies.

Funding

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Initial funding of 100 million hryvnias (about $2.7 million) was provided at launch.[1] The budget for 2024 is 1.5 billion hryvnias ($39 million).[2]

Objective and method of operation

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Brave1 plans to bring experts together who can turn ideas and prototypes into workable weapons that can be used by the armed force of Ukraine within weeks, rather than months or years. The Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Strategic Industries, Ministry of Economy, the National Security and Defense Council, the General Staff of the Armed Forces, and the Ministry of Digital Transformation are all involved in Brave1, with ideas being considered by all interested parties who then allocate a priority rating to the idea, top priority gives immediate fast track to certification.[3]

Brave1 is led by COO Nataliya Kushnerska and links inventors with designers, scientists, manufacturers and key military personnel.

Lines of work include:[4]

  • Platform – Uniting industry stakeholders in one place
  • Investment – Providing grants to developers prioritized for security and defense needs
  • Inventing – Looking for effective solutions to problems determined by security and defense forces
  • Showcasing – Providing innovators with maximum exposure to the military
  • Boosting – Supporting priority projects

Platform effectiveness

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15 projects had received funding by August 2023 with another 15 about to receive funding, each receiving around $15–20,000 out of around 200 projects that had received military testing.[5]

In September 2023 Brave1 made a presentation at the first International Forum of Defense Industries (DFNC1) held in Kyiv, attended by 252 companies from 30 countries and held a panel discussion moderated by the COO of Brave1.[6]

By October 2023, 57 projects covering areas such as Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) or drones, Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGV), Uncrewed Underwater Vehicles (UUV) and Uncrewed Surface Vessels (USV) being robotic systems, situational awareness centers, artificial intelligence, cyber security, communication systems and satellite data have received funding of $1m through Brave1. 294 projects have been given priority status and around 1,000 companies are connected to the platform including designers, manufacturers and finance companies.[7][8] November 2023 saw totals rise to 780 applications with 420 approvals and 84 grants worth $1.53 million given.[2] December saw applications rise to 877, total grants rise to 135 with funds given amounting to $2.35m.[9]

Innovative technology accredited to Brave1

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Electronic warfare (EW)

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  • Himera Tech has designed and tested, on the battle field, jam-resistant personal radio handsets using an encryption system, controlled using a mobile phone app.[10][11]
  • Power Kit makes power packs to recharge electronic gear used by soldiers using discarded electronic cigarettes.[10]
  • ETER is a small, mobile mix of electronic detection systems designed to both identify enemy signals and give the direction of those enemy signals, allowing knowledge of the location of enemy electronic warfare transmitters and the launch location of drones.[12] [13]
  • A system named Griselda aimed at collecting chaotic intelligence information, then processing, enriching, analysing and transmitting the resulting intelligent information, using AI technology.[14]
  • Piranha AVD 360 is an electronic system designed to protect armoured vehicles from drone attack by creating an area up to 600m from the small device, within which drones cannot receive command signals with satellite navigation systems also disrupted.[15]
  • A UAV drone detector has been developed by Kseonics Technology that detects the frequency of drones.[16]
  • AD Counter FPV system is a portable 3kg backpack that produces white noise within a frequency range to block control of FPV (first person view) drones with a 250m radius when the drone operator is 3km away.[17]

Equipment

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  • The development of an “invisibility cloak” is helping front line soldiers, especially snipers and special services. The cloak, whilst being camouflaged and waterproof, has an ability to block heat radiation, making the person invisible to thermal imaging.[18]
  • Armoured wheels designed for light vehicle tyres, an insert that will allow the vehicle to be driven, after the wheel is damaged or tyre punctured by turning the tyre into a run-flat.[19]

Health

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  • Anima software designers have created a package to assist the diagnosis of depression, anxiety and stress using a camera monitoring eye movement to detect reaction as pictures are shown to the patient.[10]

Security and intelligence

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  • A platform for collating open source intelligence (OSINT) has been created called Kolossal by DeepstateUA, to collect and process very large amounts of OSINT data and turn it into simple and understandable information.[20]

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV)

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Building on the work already undertaken by United24 in raising funds for supplying drones to the Army of Drones, Brave1 seeks to manufacture drones in Ukraine suitable for front line usage.

  • The Saker UAV Scout drone can use artificial intelligence (AI) target detection, including camouflage, with automatic transmission of target coordination, working in areas where Russian electronic warfare defense blocks normal drones. It was approved in September 2023.[21][22]
  • Airlogix drones for surveillance with autonomous mode and encrypted communications with protection against signal interference.[23][24]
  • Mini Shark reconnaissance UAV drone produced by Ukrspecsystems with a 2-hour flight and 35 km radius of operation, used for target detection using a 10x zoom optical-electronic camera.[25]
  • Sirko reconnaissance UAV by Skyassist, with a range of 65 km and the ability to stream videos at 25 km from the operator helps locate and then correct fire onto targets. Sirko-2 has an increased range of 140 km providing remote fire correction.[26]
  • A drone mine detector, ST-1 autonomously searches for mines and works, on average, four times faster than a human. With a sensor to avoid objects and allow the drone to fly at very low levels.[27]
  • Backfire attack drone, designed to be highly resistant to Russian electronic warfare efforts with a range of 35km. Used 50 times successfully under battlefield conditions to attack artillery, command centres and ammunition dumps as a test, which it passed and is in mass production mode.[28]
  • Yaschyr land mine drone, operational range 3km, designed to deliver surface mines. [29]

Unmanned ground vehicles (UGV)

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  • The THeMIS by Milrem Robotics, an unmanned ground evacuation vehicle is designed to collect a casualty from a forward position where a normal ambulance could risk the crew the tracked vehicle is controlled remotely.[30]
  • One of the first idea applications, the Liut, an armoured wheeled robot is controlled remotely, it is capable of manoeuvring and has an automatic targeting system and 360 degree camera. It can fire its mounted tank machine gun at the enemy before being returned to the controller, meaning that the operator is capable of inflicting damage from a relatively safe distance. It was given priority and within two months the first working models were being tested on the front line.[3]
  • Temerland is trialing an “iron caterpillar” that uses a robotic vehicle with a cheap disposable mine activation roller as a form of all terrain mine activator.[31]
  • Ratel S (or honey badger) was designed to allow an accurate strike to be made from a safe distance. A small fast wheeled robot that carries an anti-tank mine or bomb and can be directed against a fortification or enemy vehicle up to 6 km away and detonated remotely.[32] The vehicle can also be used to transport 100 kg of ammunition to front lines, it has a top speed of 24kph and climbs over 25 cm high obstacles.[33] On 2 April 2024 Ukrainian forces claimed to have blown up a bridge in Ivanivske (near Bakhmut), that the Russians were using for logistics, using a Ratel S.[34]
  • SkyLabUA built the Sirko-S robot which has universal uses and can be remotely controlled to transport 200 kg of supplies to the front line and return with a wounded man, if necessary. Fitted with thermal cameras to assist night time movement, the vehicle costs around $8,000 to make.[35]
  • D-21-11 universal ground robot capable of carrying detachable cargo units.[36]
  • D-11 static ground robot using D-21-11 base with a machine gun turret. [13]
  • Volta-E cargo delivery vehicle, 90cmx110cmx40cm, can carry 300kg but recommended for 100-150kg and can move 12km on one charge. Radio controlled crawler.[29]
  • Partner-VS crawler de-miner, designed to take a lineal de-mining charge through a minefield, with the line then exploded to clear a path. [29]

Unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV)

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  • A maritime drone, called the Toloka TLK-150 is a small robotic submarine, 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) long with twin thrusters mounted on wing-like stabilizers designed as a one direction drone, already in prototype form in May 2023, it is now in operation fitted with a with a High-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warhead. Capable of a range around 100 km and a payload of 20–50 kg, the drone which travels just below the surface, can be a suicide weapon or intelligence gathering drone.[37][38][39]
  • Plans for the Toloka TLK-400, which is longer at 4–6 m (13–20 ft) still with 2 thrusters and a 700+ mile range and payload of 1,100 pounds.[40][39]
  • The Toloka TLK-1000 is planned at 4–12 m (13–39 ft) with 4 thrusters and a range of 1200+ miles with a payload of 11,000 pounds.[40][37][39]

Weapons

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  • Developed by devDroid, the weapon comprises a remotely controlled turret TGP that uses AI for enemy detection and engagement. When placed in a trench, the system will wait, then identify, track and engage an enemy by raising itself up, before retracting below visible levels. The droid is trained to recognise enemies and has a remote operator who is not needed to control the fight.[41]
  • ShaBlya by Roboneers, is a remotely controlled fire complex designed to install on UGV vehicles and objects, such as forward sentry positions and is controlled remotely.[42]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Ukraine launches 'BRAVE1′ tech cluster to boost military capability". 26 April 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Ukraine's Defense Tech Cluster BRAVE1 Plans to Invest $39M in Startups in 2024". Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Ukraine's deputy minister of digital transformation on building a military tech sector from scratch". 26 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Ukrainian Startup Ecosystem Joins Forces with the Military on BRAVE1 Platform". 15 June 2023.
  5. ^ "BRAVE1 defense technology development cluster awarded $225,000 in grants". 14 August 2023.
  6. ^ "BRAVE1 Newsletter #4". 23 October 2023.
  7. ^ "Who finances military developments in Ukraine, and which directions are priorities?". 18 October 2023.
  8. ^ "Уже профинансированы проекты на $1,2 млн, дальше – больше. Как работает оборонный кластер Brave1". 20 October 2023.
  9. ^ "The defense technology cluster Brave1 has funded 135 developments with $2.3 million". 22 December 2023.
  10. ^ a b c "From Robots to Recycled Vapes, Ukraine's War Effort Gets Inventive". 10 August 2023.
  11. ^ "Ukrainians invent radio that cannot be jammed by Russian electronic warfare". 10 October 2023.
  12. ^ "Jamming wars, part 5: Kyiv deploys newly developed ETER electronic warfare system". 1 November 2023.
  13. ^ a b "Ukraine is testing the D-21-11 unmanned ground platform". 5 January 2024.
  14. ^ "Griselda". Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  15. ^ "Ukraine develops Piranha jammer to defend its armored vehicles". 2 November 2023.
  16. ^ "Notifies about the approach of an enemy UAV: Ukrainian inventors have created a detector drone". 23 May 2023.
  17. ^ "Brave1 Cluster Developers Created the AD Counter FPV System Against russian FPV Drones". 23 January 2024.
  18. ^ "Brave1 developers have created "invisibility cloak" for Ukrainian military". 4 October 2023.
  19. ^ "Ukraine developed "armoured wheels" for army's pickup trucks —". 30 December 2023.
  20. ^ "Kolossal platform is created for OSINT intelligence". 7 December 2023.
  21. ^ "Saker". Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  22. ^ "Ukraine approves artifiicial intelligence-enabled Saker drone for use in combat". 8 September 2023.
  23. ^ "AIRLOGIX PROJECT GOR". Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  24. ^ "Exclusive: Inside Ukraine's secret drone factories". 23 October 2023.
  25. ^ "Ukrspecsystems Unveils the Mini Shark: a Cutting-Edge UAV for Reconnaissance and Target Detection". 27 April 2023.
  26. ^ "About us". Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  27. ^ "Ukraine conflict: Ukraine develops unmanned mine detector". 27 October 2023.
  28. ^ "Ukrainian Defence Ministry's commission approves Backfire drone resistant to Russian electronic warfare". 20 November 2023.
  29. ^ a b c "How a Robot Army Will Change Military Operations: Seven Developments Already Working or Coming Soon to the Front Line". 25 January 2024.
  30. ^ "The THeMIS UGV". Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  31. ^ ""Iron Caterpillar" affordable unmanned mine-clearing system being developed in Ukraine". 16 September 2023.
  32. ^ "Ukraine develops new type of kamikaze robots". 24 October 2023.
  33. ^ "Ukraine deploys mine-hauling ground drone against Russia". 25 October 2023.
  34. ^ "Ukraine's forces destroy bridge with Ratel S ground drone on Bakhmut front – video". Ukrainska Pravda. 2 April 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  35. ^ "Ukrainian UGV Sirko-S1 Shows Up on Battlefield, the Development is in Testing Phase". 10 November 2023.
  36. ^ "Brave1 Cluster Unveils the D-21-11 Robot Able to Perform Various Tasks". 5 January 2024.
  37. ^ a b "Ukrainian Toloka TLK-150: looks like a missile, acts like one, but swims underwater". 15 May 2023.
  38. ^ "How Ukraine's naval drones are suppressing Russian navy". 14 August 2023.
  39. ^ a b c "Black Sea Drone War: How a Country with No Warships Has Russia's Navy on the Run". 19 October 2023.
  40. ^ a b Sutton, HI (10 May 2023). "Innovative Submarine Drone Is Ukraine's New Weapon Against Russian Navy". Naval News. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  41. ^ "Ukrainian company devDroid develops AI-controlled turret for trench defense". 4 September 2023.
  42. ^ "SHABLYA". Retrieved 7 December 2023.
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