Laurent Sissmann

Laurent Sissmann
Senior Vice President of Unmanned Systems, LeonardoLaurent Sissmann occupies the position of the current Senior Vice President of Unmanned Systems at Leonardo. He has been a part of the company for over ten years.
News mentions
The transportation of biomedical material with drones is the goal of the test, which has just been successfully completed, designed and undertaken by Leonardo, Telespazio (joint venture between Leonardo 67% and Thales 33%) and Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, in collaboration with ENAC (National Civil Aviation Authority). This is one of the first demonstrations in Italy of biological samples and biomedical products delivery, along routes not easily accessible by ordinary roads, with the aid of vertical take-off drones equipped with electric propulsion and therefore with a very low ecological and acoustic impact. Rehearsals took place between the 19 and 22 October. Cloud-based digital platform The drone transported biomedical material flying near Rome, between two sites of the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital which are more than 32 km away from each other: from the S. Marinella collection center to the Palidoro analysis center and vice versa, using an automatic control mode beyond the operator’s visual line of sight (BVLOS). The test involved the use of Telespazio's cloud-based T-DROMES digital platform, which allows the provision of end-to-end services: from planning to conducting the mission of a drone, up to the processing of data acquired by the on-board sensors. Security and safety The project is part of Leonardo's path of innovation and experimentation in Advanced Air Delivery" “We are pleased with this milestone, which was achieved thanks to partners of excellence such as the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, Telespazio and through the collaboration of ENAC. The project is part of Leonardo's path of innovation and experimentation in Advanced Air Delivery, of which another fundamental element is the D-FLIGHT platform for the management of drone air traffic, realized with ENAV”, Laurent Sissmann, SVP Unmanned Systems of Leonardo commented. "Leonardo is committed to serving and protecting communities, contributing to their sustainable growth by leading in next generation technologies. Partnering with governments, private organizations and industries for the best security and safety capabilities is a cornerstone of Leonardo’s BeTomorrow2030 Strategic Plan and the investment in autonomous systems is in line with our growth strategies. In particular, with the skills we are developing in this field, we want to support the country to reach a leading role in the development of drone-based operations and services”. Innovative project “We are very happy to be able to collaborate with Leonardo on such an innovative project" Mariella Enoc, President of the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital declared. “We strongly wanted to start the experimentation in this pandemic period, which requires all health professionals to strongly accelerate the diagnostic pathways. This test will allow us to study the development of a service that can produce significant improvements in clinical and logistical processes, which will bring benefit to the entire regional and national health system in the future”. Important support activity "Remotely piloted aircraft,” said the Director General of ENAC, Alessio Quaranta, “represent one of the driving forces of the current industrial revolution to which the scientific and industrial communities around the world are watching with interest. Being able to use them for health and social purposes makes these tools even more essential for the sustainable development of our society." Drone operators tested the U-Space geo-awareness and strategic deconfliction services by D-FLIGHT platform "The release of the authorization that allowed the test is the result of an important support activity to the development of the operational concept project and to the technical evaluation carried out by ENAC and the institutional coordination with all the actors involved, for the execution of the operations in a particularly complex context such as that of the terminal area of Rome which includes approaches and departures from the airports of Fiumicino and Ciampino" Strategic deconfliction services "A special thanks from us to the Ministry of the Interior, the Prefecture of Rome, the Rome Police Headquarters, the Air Force, the Italian Army, the Port Authority and the Coast Guard, ENAV, the 118 Rescue Service, the Municipality of Santa Marinella, the Municipality of Fiumicino, as well as, of course, to Leonardo, Telespazio and the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital”. As part of the experiment, the drone operators tested the U-Space geo-awareness and strategic deconfliction services provided by the D-FLIGHT platform, set up in 2018 by ENAV (the company that manages civil air traffic in Italy) together with Leonardo and Telespazio. Thanks to the services that will be progressively made available by D-FLIGHT, it will be possible for traditional aviation and thousands of drones to coexist in the Italian airspace as drones will be entrusted with the most diverse tasks in the future. Remotely piloted aircraft D-FLIGHT is confirmed as one of the first operational U-Spaces in Europe. Finishing in December 2020, the testing campaign includes several additional phases, in which various types of remotely piloted aircraft will be used. The long-term objective is to be able to extend the service in a densely populated urban environment, by connecting the headquarters of Palidoro to the other Bambino Gesù sites in Rome. Telespazio, a Leonardo and Thales 67/33 joint venture, is one of the world’s leading operators in satellite services Leonardo, a global high-technology company, is among the top ten world players in aerospace, defense and security and Italy’s main industrial company. Organized into five business divisions, Leonardo has a significant industrial presence in Italy, the United Kingdom, Poland and the USA, where it also operates through subsidiaries such as Leonardo DRS (defense electronics), and joint ventures and partnerships: ATR, MBDA, Telespazio, Thales Alenia Space and Avio. Satellite services Leonardo competes in the most important international markets by leveraging its areas of technological and product leadership (helicopters, aircraft, aerostructures, electronics, cybersecurity and space). Listed on the Milan Stock Exchange (LDO), in 2019 Leonardo recorded consolidated revenues of €13.8 billion and invested €1.5 billion in Research and Development. The Group has been part of the Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI) since 2010 and became one of the industry leaders of Aerospace & Defense sector of DJSI in 2019. Telespazio, a Leonardo and Thales 67/33 joint venture, is one of the world’s leading operators in satellite services. Its activities range from the design and development of space systems to the management of launch services, from in-orbit satellite control to Earth observation, from integrated communications, satellite navigation and localization services to scientific programs. Telespazio plays a role in the reference markets harnessing technological experience acquired over the years. Civil aviation sector Since its establishment, the company has participated in major European space programmes such as Galileo, EGNOS, Copernicus and COSMO-SkyMed. In 2019, Telespazio generated sales of EUR 535 million while employing approximately 2,600 people worldwide. ENAC acts as the only authority for technical regulation, certification, supervision and control of the civil aviation sector in Italy in compliance with the powers deriving from the Navigation Code. The primary objectives of the institutional mandate are highlighted in its Mission: "In carrying out its institutional activity of regulation and control of the aviation sector, the Body promotes the development of civil aviation, guaranteeing to the country, in particular to users and businesses, flight safety, the protection of rights, the quality of services and fair competitiveness in respect of the environment ."
The Politecnico di Milano won the first edition of the ‘Leonardo Drone Contest. An Open Innovation Challenge’, a competition launched by Leonardo in collaboration with six Italian universities to promote the development of Artificial Intelligence for unmanned systems. The September 18 challenges were held in Turin where teams from six universities competed: the Politecnico di Torino, the Politecnico di Milano, Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna, Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, ‘Tor Vergata’ University of Rome and University of Naples ‘Federico II’ – competing with each other for the top honor. Developing systematic methods The digital award ceremony was attended by the Minister of Technological Innovation and Digitalization, Paola Pisano, the Minister of University and Research, Gaetano Manfredi, the President of the Piedmont Region, Alberto Cirio, the Mayor of Turin, Chiara Appendino, Leonardo's CEO, Alessandro Profumo, and Leonardo's Senior Vice President Unmanned Systems, Laurent Sissmann. The team of the winning doctoral student, Gabriele Roggi of the Politecnico di Milano, aims to develop a drone equipped with autonomous driving and navigation capabilities. Under the supervision of Professor Marco Lovera, the team is developing systematic methods and tools for the design of on-board autonomous functions and a localization algorithm for motion planning and collision avoidance. Leonardo drone contest The goal of the ‘Leonardo Drone Contest’ is to create synergies between development and academic research The first edition of the ‘Leonardo Drone Contest’, as highlighted in the presentation of the project during the live broadcast by Laurent Sissmann, Senior Vice President Unmanned Systems at Leonardo, showed the potential for fruitful collaboration between industry and universities, implemented over months of work, commitment and the ingenuity of PhD students and their teams. An addition honor, the University of Bologna, with PhD student Lorenzo Gentilini and Professor Lorenzo Marconi, was awarded the ‘Special Jury Prize’. The goal of the ‘Leonardo Drone Contest’ is to create synergies between development and academic research in the fields of Artificial Intelligence, Computer Vision, Sensor Fusion and Machine Learning for the development of technologies for applied artificial intelligence to unmanned systems and the birth of an ecosystem that involves large companies, universities, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), spin-offs and startups. Unmanned drone systems The competition, officially started in June 2019, recently closes the first of three scheduled contests. The final contest will end in 2022. Over the next two years, the doctoral students, supported by the professors and in collaboration with the university teams and Leonardo, will develop and propose more innovative capabilities applied to unmanned drone systems. The ‘Leonardo Drone Contest’ is the only competition in Italy in which universities compete in an artificial intelligence competition. Leonardo is the only company in Europe able to provide complete remote piloted solutions - by designing and developing all the elements of a drone based system - for intelligence, surveillance, monitoring, information acquisition missions, integrating platforms, radar sensors and electro-optics, mission systems and ground control stations. The development of technologies and applications in the unmanned field is part of Leonardo's strategic plan, including a path of sustainable growth and increased competitiveness in the long term.
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