Click here to search Blue Horizons and other CSAT publications
(replace nanotechnology with your search word/phrase)
Mission Description
Blue Horizons 2007 (aka Horizons 21)
Before academic year 2006, Lt Gen Wood, then AF/A8, tasked Air University to start a series of long range studies looking 20 years into the future to provide a vision for what the Air Force must start doing today to be prepared for the challenges of 2025 and beyond. The Air Staff has the responsibility for looking into the future and determining where it must invest in people, training, education and technology. The difficulty of long range plans is that the future is opaque and the pressures of everyday activity leave little time for reflective thought or allocating funds for concepts that will not materialize for decades. The last major internal study of the future, Air Force 2025, was done at Air University in 1996 where over 260 officers worked through the research that led to a multi-volume report outlining alternative futures and technologies required for those complicated and dangerous worlds.
The Blue Horizons study is designed to answer questions similar to those addressed in the Air Force 2025 study. These include: What are the emerging technologies that will shape the US Air Force and the conflict arena in which it must operate in 20 years in the future? What could air, space and cyberspace power look like 20 years in the future? Who will have access to emerging technologies that can make a difference? How soon will these important technological achievements become fielded systems?
Blue Horizons 2007 was the first year of what has become a continuous effort involving a group of Air War College faculty and approximately 45 students each year from the Air War College and Air Command and Staff College. That first year’s efforts were led by Dr. Grant Hammond, Mr. Ted Hailes, and Lieutenant Colonel Jim Rothenflue. Under their leadership, the students researched future systems and technological concepts working closely with subject matter experts from the Air Force Research Laboratory, the Defense Research Projects Agency, major universities and businesses, and other government laboratories and agencies. In addition to producing the reports posted here, the result was a cadre of officers conversant enough in critical areas of emerging technologies to ask critical questions and make assessments of systems in directed energy, biotechnology, nanotechnology and cyber technologies and what they mean for the future of the U.S. Air Force.
Blue Horizons 2007 is only the beginning of a series of annual long range vision studies which will be known collectively as “Blue Horizons.” These annual studies will serve as an input for the development of Title X wargames, Strategic Planning Guidance, Quadrennial Defense Review scenarios and the development of service requirements.
Blue Horizons is overseen by the Air Force Futures Group, and run by the Center for Strategy and Technology. The individual research papers, group technology assessments and briefings given to the Chief and the Air Staff are designed for easy use by staffs at all levels with researchable data base, synopsis of major concepts, and power point slides. Points of contact for Blue Horizons are: Colonel John Geis and Mr. Ted Hailes.
Executive Summaries
Briefings
Selected Papers
- Blue Horizons 2007 (2006-2007)
- The Air Force in silico - Computational Biology in 2025, by Christopher Coates, Nov 2007
- Biofuels: an Alternative to U.S. Air Force Petroleum Fuel Dependency, by Mark S. Danigole, Dec 2007
- Air Force and the Cyberspace Mission Defending the Air Force's Computer Network in the Future, by Shane P. Courville, Dec 2007
- Next Generation Nanotechnology Assembly Fabrication Methods: a Trend Forecast, by Vincent T. Jovene Jr, Jan 2008
- Acquisition Leaders for Rapid Technology Insertion Programs, by Christopher M. Coombs, Dec 2007
- Improving Satellite Protection with Nanotechnology, by Joseph Huntington, Dec 2007
- Targeting at the Speed of Light, by Richard Hughey, Feb 2007
- Blue Horizons 2008 (2007-2008)
Other Blue Horizon Papers
- Blue Horizons 2007 (2006-2007)
- Commercial Eyes in Space: Implications for US Military Operations in 2030, by William Bell, March 2008
- How the Air Force Should Stay Engaged in Computer Vision Technology, by Mark Skouson, April 2007
- Continuously Available Battlefield Surveillance, by James Lake, April 2007
- Weaponeering the Future Directed Energy Weapons Effectiveness Now and Tomorrow, by Chadwick Fager, April 2007
- Persistent Space Situational Awareness: Distributed Real-time Awareness Global Network in Space (DRAGNETS), by Dustin Ziegler, April 2007
- Connecting the Edge: Mobil Ad-Hoc Networks (MANETs) for Network Centric Warfare, by Brent Peacock, April 2007
- Nano Air Vehicles: A Technology Forecast, by William Davis, April 2007
- Autonomous Defensive Space Control Via On-Board Artificial Neural Networks, by Michael Manor, April 2007
- Wild Ride: Launching Troops Through Space for Rapid Precision Global Intervention, by Shon Williams, April 2007
- Responsive Space Situation Awareness in 2020, by Russell Teehan, April 2007
- Enabling Battlespace Persistent Surveillance: The Form, Function, and Future of Smart Dust, by Scott Dickson, April 2007
- Getting to Space On A Thread...Space Elevator as Alternative Access to Space, by Jason Kent, April 2007
- State Actor Threats in 2025, by Joel Luker, April 2007
- Accelerating The Kill Chain Via Future Unmanned Aircraft, by Julian Cheater, April 2007
- Future Cyborgs: Human-Machine Interface for Virtual Reality Applications, by Robert Powell, April 2007
- Placing US Air Force Information Technology Investment Under the "Nanoscope" - A Clear Vision of Nanotechnology's Impact on Computing in 2030, by Joseph Imwalle, April 2007
|
|