US Army researchers hope to lighten battery load for soldiers

Across all six of the Army's modernization priorities -- long-range precision fires, next generation combat vehicle, future vertical lift, network, air and missile defense, and Soldier lethality -- there has been a dramatic increase in demand for power as a result of the introduction of new system capabilities and prototypes that are energy hungry, said an Army lead engineer cited by David Vergun, Army News Service.
href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgF1AIW2D3YLQZSOCVShJ4W9gGwonAkA6mBrQ13oQN96pn9T4FeDoOBFF7BFuFT8DWdEh4DRsUVV3LWLfayTiWDhMxfuylAZCp_8iClmVdu22axOoPJm_buqkTMeg1-mV2gYRmtwnxTC7S1/s1600/US_Army_researchers_hope_to_lighten_battery_load_for_soldiers.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"> A soldier tests a photovoltaic solar panel harvester during an energy-harvesting technology demonstration at Fort Devens, Mass. (Photo: US Army/David Kamm)

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