Mercury Systems, Inc. announced it will demonstrate an AI-powered hardware-software threat detection solution at the 2025 Association of the United States Army (AUSA) Annual Meeting and Exposition.
Mercury’s Future Airborne Capability Environment (FACE)-compliant aided target recognition software uses AI to pinpoint targets, detect distant threats, monitor movement and share information across the network. It has been proven in numerous government-sponsored flight tests supporting large-scale, coordinated drone swarms and manned-unmanned teaming operations. Mercury will demonstrate the software at AUSA 2025 running on the company’s C5ISR Modular Open Suite of Standards (CMOSS)-aligned computing hardware and small form factor processors, feeding actionable information to the company’s display hardware.
“The U.S. Army’s modernization depends on trusted partners that can deliver advanced solutions with speed, adaptability, and security,” said Roya Montakhab, Mercury’s senior vice president of Integrated Processing Solutions. “At AUSA 2025, we are showcasing a range of processing capabilities—from components to integrated solutions — that will empower tomorrow’s operations and give Army warfighters an advantage on the battlefield.”
To see Mercury’s integrated threat detection solution at AUSA, schedule a meeting or visit booth 1115 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Oct. 13-15.