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The army wants soldiers of the future to be
better equipped
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US Army plans 'Iron Man' armour
for soldiers
The US Army is working to develop
"revolutionary" smart armour that would give its troops
"superhuman strength".
It is calling on the
technology industry, government labs and academia to help build the Iron
Man-style suit.
Exoskeletons that
allow soldiers to carry large loads much further are already widely used by the
army.
The Tactical Assault
Light Operator Suit (Talos) would have such a frame but would also have layers
of smart materials fitted with sensors.
The suit would also
need to have wide-area networking and a wearable computer similar to Google
Glass, the US Army said.
Increase
strength
It should be made of
smart material fitted with sensors to monitor body temperature, heart rate and
hydration levels.
The exoskeleton, which
could be attached to arms and legs, would be likely to use hydraulics to
greatly increase strength.
"The requirement
is a comprehensive family of systems in a combat armour suit where we bring
together an exoskeleton with innovative armour, displays for power monitoring,
health monitoring, and integrating a weapon into that," said Lt Col Karl
Borjes, a science adviser at the US Army's research, development and
engineering command.
"It's advanced
armour. It's communications, antennas. It's cognitive performance. It's
sensors, miniature-type circuits. That's all going to fit in here, too,"
he added.
Magnetic
field
According to US Army
Sgt Maj Chris Faris, "no one industry can build it".
Instead the army is
calling on research and development organisations, private industry as well as
government labs and academia to support the project.
The US Army said it
was likely that scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology would
be involved in the design.
An MIT team is
currently developing liquid body armour - made from fluids that transform into
a solid when a magnetic field or electrical current is applied.
Large
robot
In an interview with
US news site NPR, MIT professor Gareth McKinley compared the
futuristic armour to that seen in Hollywood films.
"It sounds
exactly like Iron Man," he said.
"The other kind
of things that you see in the movies... would be the kind of external suit that
Sigourney Weaver wears in Aliens, where it's a large robot that amplifies the
motions and lifting capability of a human."
The aim is the get the
Talos armour out in the field within three years.

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