Lockheed Martin Unveils LampreyMMAUV
February 10, 2026 | Lockheed MartinEstimated reading time: 1 minute
Lockheed Martin unveils the Lamprey Multi‑Mission Autonomous Undersea Vehicle (MMAUV), a breakthrough “plug-and‑play” submersible that gives U.S. and allied warfighters technological and strategic advantage in today’s contested maritime arena.
Built with the U.S. Navy’s need for covert, assured access and sea denial operations, LampreyMMAUV can arrive in theater with a fully charged battery. Mimicking nature, it can hitch a ride on a host surface vessel or submarine, utilize hydrogenators to charge batteries and arrive in theater ready for operational missions. Lockheed Martin’s LampreyMMAUV can perform a wide range of missions including delivering undersea and air kinetic and non-kinetic effects; performing intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, targeting, and multi-intelligence collection; and deploying equipment to the seafloor.
“The modern battlespace demands platforms that hide, adapt and dominate,” said Paul Lemmo, vice president and general manager of Sensors, Effectors & Mission Systems at Lockheed Martin. “LampreyMMAUV was internally funded, letting us iterate at lightning speed and hand the Navy a true multi mission weapon that detects, disrupts, decoys and engages on its own.
Key Innovations that Put the Navy Ahead
- Novel Range and Placement – Mimicking nature, the vehicle attaches onto a host surface ship or submarine - no host modifications needed – once attached it recharges batteries with built‑in hydrogenators.
- Deployable Payload Centric Design – From anti‑submarine torpedoes to UAV launchers, the open‑architecture payload bay lets customers tailor the vehicle to any mission set.
- Dual‑Mode Mission Set – LampreyMMAUV can execute Assured Access (stealthy intelligence, persistent surveillance, precision strike) or Sea Denial (electronic disruption, decoy deployment, kinetic attack), giving commanders a single platform that flips the maritime balance of power.
Testimonial
"Advertising in PCB007 Magazine has been a great way to showcase our bare board testers to the right audience. The I-Connect007 team makes the process smooth and professional. We’re proud to be featured in such a trusted publication."
Klaus Koziol - atgSuggested Items
The Global Electronics Association and Responsible Business Alliance Publish GHG Emissions Reporting Guidance
04/14/2026 | Global Electronics AssociationThe Global Electronics Association and Responsible Business Alliance today announced the publication of joint guidance on Accounting for Scope 3 Category 1 Greenhouse Gas Emissions; saving time, improving data accuracy, and enabling more consistent, high-quality sustainability reporting across global supply chains.
Synopsys Solutions Support NASA's Artemis Program with Spacesuit Analysis and Communication System Development
04/14/2026 | PRNewswireNASA selected Synopsys, Inc. and EMA to verify spacesuit compatibility with the lunar environment.
Teledyne Supports NASA Artemis II with Critical Technologies
04/09/2026 | BUSINESS WIRETeledyne Technologies Incorporated announced its broad support of NASA’s Artemis II mission, with multiple Teledyne businesses delivering mission‑critical technologies that help power, protect, connect, and track America’s first crewed voyage around the Moon in more than 50 years.
Don’t Call It Ground, Call It Return
04/09/2026 | Kristin Moyer, Global Electronics AssociationIf you’ve studied electrical or computer engineering, or have just read an electronics schematic, circuit diagram, or other application notes, you've likely seen the term “Ground,” often abbreviated GND. This is used in school and during the teaching of electronics circuit analysis to indicate a reference or zero-voltage node for circuit analysis. It is also taught that there is no current in GND since the voltage is zero. These are assumptions made for the purpose of simplifying the introduction to circuit analysis.
US Space Force Selects L3Harris to Strengthen America’s Defense with Advanced Space Surveillance
04/08/2026 | L3Harris TechnologiesL3Harris Technologies has received a $150 million contract from the U.S. Space Force’s Space Systems Command to sustain and modernize critical ground systems, which enable faster decision-making, earlier threat warning and sustained space superiority.