Author, Institution: Karolis Jasas, Kaunas University of Technology
Science area, field of science: Technological Sciences, Transport Engineering, T003
Scientific Advisor: Prof. Dr. Hab. Algimantas Fedaravičius (Kaunas University of Technology, Technological Sciences, Transport Engineering, T003)
Dissertation Defense Board of Transport Engineering Science Field:
Prof. Dr. Laurencas Raslavičius (Kaunas University of Technology, Technological Sciences, Transport Engineering, T003) – chairperson
Prof. Dr. Svajonė Bekešienė (General Jonas Žemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania, Natural Sciences, Mathematics, N001)
Prof. Dr. Hab. Marijonas Bogdevičius (Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Technological Sciences, Transport Engineering, T003)
Prof. Dr. Hab. Šarka Hoškova-Mayerova (Brno University of Defence, Czech Republic, Natural Sciences, Mathematics, N001)
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Rolandas Makaras (Kaunas University of Technology, Technological Sciences, Transport Engineering, T003)
Dissertation defense meeting will be at Rectorate Hall of Kaunas University of Technology (K. Donelaičio 73–402, Kaunas)
The doctoral dissertation is available at the library of Kaunas University of Technology (Gedimino g. 50, Kaunas)
Annotation: Various tools are used to train and maintain air defence personnel skills, such as virtual computer simulators and combat firing at stationary or moving targets. During the initial training phase, soldiers are trained in target detection, tracking, and destruction procedures using virtual computer simulators. However, practice has shown that training soldiers using virtual computer simulators for combat shooting in field conditions is not adequate, and shooting training using combat missiles is very expensive, so it is used only at the final stage of operator training. This equipment is not just a tool but a crucial asset for strengthening NATO and the EU’s air defence capabilities. Air defence’s essential and permanent mission in peace, crisis, and conflict is to protect the Alliance’s territory, population, and forces against any air threat. Therefore, creating a field simulator of a short-range air defence system, which includes a fire position and natural target systems, is highly relevant. This simulator will effectively simulate all short-range air defence system operations without needing combat missiles, providing a cost-effective and efficient training solution. The work deals with the problem of creating, researching, and practically implementing a field simulator of laser-guided, very short-range air defence systems. This practical approach, which ensures that the proposed solution is not just theoretical but can be effectively implemented in real scenarios, instils confidence in its feasibility and practicality.
August 27 d. 13:00
Rectorate Hall at Kaunas University of Technology (K. Donelaičio 73-402, Kaunas)
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