SAROPS Software Supports Coast Guard Rescue

April 5, 2007

Within months after beginning fielding with the U.S. Coast Guard, Search and Rescue Optimal Planning System (SAROPS) software developed by a Northrop Grumman Corporation team was instrumental in the search and rescue of an Orlando, Fla., resident who went overboard while on a cruise and was spotted by the Coast Guard eight hours later about 30 miles from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

SAROPS uses a sophisticated, cutting-edge animated grid model to project where floating persons or objects might be located. It allows searchers to define the situation, access environmental data such as wind and water current patterns, compute drift models, simulate environmental hazards, predict survival time, and develop a comprehensive search plan with available resources.

Northrop Grumman began developing SAROPS in 2003 under the U.S. Coast Guard Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (C4ISR) contract. The SAROPS portion of the contract is valued at approximately $2 million per year. Since December 2006, SAROPS has been fielded throughout the Coast Guard and is currently the service's primary search and rescue tool.

Related News

Port of Los Angeles Nets $58 Million for Harbor Maintenance Houthis Claim More Ship Attacks, Targetting US Warship and Merchant Vessel Suspected Somali Pirates Taken to Seychelles Worker Dies in Accident at Peru's Chancay Megaport Project Cruise Ship Arrives in New York with 44-foot Whale Carcass on Its Bow