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DARPA ALIAS Autonomous Black Hawk Delivered to U.S. Army

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Summary

DARPA has delivered an experimental fly-by-wire H-60Mx Black Hawk helicopter equipped with the Sikorsky MATRIX autonomy suite to the U.S. Army for advanced operational testing. This delivery marks the completion of DARPA's Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automation System (ALIAS) program, which achieved the world's first uninhabited Black Hawk flight in 2022. Under the technology transition agreement between DARPA and the Army's Project Manager for Utility Helicopters, the Army Combat Capabilities Development Command will use the helicopter as a flying laboratory to mature reduced-crew and fully autonomous flight capabilities.

“The ALIAS program has successfully developed and demonstrated a powerful, flexible automation architecture that is now poised to provide the U.S. Army with a significant operational edge.”

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DARPA completed its ALIAS program by delivering an H-60Mx Black Hawk helicopter with MATRIX autonomy technology to the U.S. Army on March 20, 2026. The technology was developed and demonstrated over several years, including the historic uninhabited Black Hawk flight in 2022. The Army Combat Capabilities Development Command will use the experimental helicopter as a flying laboratory to further develop autonomous flight capabilities and integrate advanced mission-specific sensors.

For defense contractors and aerospace suppliers involved in autonomous systems development, this delivery demonstrates continued Department of Defense commitment to autonomous aviation technology. Contractors working on similar autonomy platforms may find increased DoD interest in reduced-crew and fully autonomous flight solutions. The transition from DARPA research to Army operational testing signals maturation of this technology class for potential wider military adoption.

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Apr 23, 2026

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DARPA-developed autonomous helicopter technology transitions to U.S. Army


H-60Mx Black Hawk uses ALIAS-funded autonomy technologies

U.S. Army’s experimental H‑60Mx Black Hawk helicopter uses Sikorsky’s MATRIX autonomy suite, which forms the core of the DARPA ALIAS program. Source: Sikorsky

March 20, 2026

DARPA’s vision to reimagine the role of human pilots and revolutionize military aviation has culminated in the transition of a DARPA-developed autonomous flight system to the U.S. Army. As part of the technology transition agreement between DARPA and the Army’s Project Manager for Utility Helicopters, an experimental, fly-by-wire H-60Mx Black Hawk, fully equipped with the DARPA-funded Sikorsky MATRIX™ autonomy suite, has been delivered to the U.S. Army for advanced operational testing.

This milestone is the capstone achievement of DARPA’s Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automation System (ALIAS) program. The program's objective was to create a highly automated system that could be integrated into existing aircraft to enhance mission flexibility and safety, particularly in complex and contested environments. The successful maturation and transfer of this technology to a service partner is a prime example of DARPA's core mission: developing breakthrough technologies and reducing their risks for military adoption.

“The ALIAS program has successfully developed and demonstrated a powerful, flexible automation architecture that is now poised to provide the U.S. Army with a significant operational edge,” said Stuart Young, the ALIAS program manager in DARPA’s Tactical Technology Office. “This transition is a testament to the power of government and industry partnership to advance technology. It will allow the Army to build on a solid foundation of technical-risk reduction, enabling them to explore new warfighting concepts and push the boundaries of what’s possible in aviation.”

Under DARPA’s leadership, the ALIAS program rigorously developed, tested and proved the MATRIX technology, demonstrating everything from basic air maneuvers to complex mission profiles. A key achievement was the world’s first-ever uninhabited flight of a Black Hawk helicopter in 2022, proving the system could handle an entire mission from pre-flight checks to autonomous landing, including responding to simulated system failures.

With the foundational research and development complete, the Army Combat Capabilities Development Command (DEVCOM) will now own and use the experimental helicopter as a flying laboratory to mature and expand the technology. This next phase will focus on integrating advanced mission-specific sensors and exploring the unprecedented operational flexibility afforded by reduced-crew and fully autonomous flight.

Media with inquiries about ALIAS should contact DARPA Public Affairs.

A Sikorsky operator flies an experimental H‑60Mx Black Hawk helicopter using technologies developed under the DARPA ALIAS program. Source: Sikorsky

Office

Tactical Technology Office

Related content

| | The ALIAS program has successfully developed and demonstrated a powerful, flexible automation architecture that is now poised to provide the U.S. Army with a significant operational edge.

Stuart Young, ALIAS program manager |

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
DARPA
Published
March 20th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Transportation companies
Industry sector
3364 Aerospace & Defense
Activity scope
Autonomous systems development Military technology transition Aerospace R&D
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Defense & National Security
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Aviation Artificial Intelligence

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