Inside Unmanned Systems

FEB-MAR 2016

Inside Unmanned Systems provides actionable business intelligence to decision-makers and influencers operating within the global UAS community. Features include analysis of key technologies, policy/regulatory developments and new product design.

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ENGINEERING. PRACTICE. POLICY. 35 unmanned systems inside January/February 2016 Ty Hedrick of the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill worked with a team that included researchers from MIT and the University of Washington in Seattle to to develop a UAS with the ability to avoid obstacles like a bird. The team at Chapel Hill field tested from March to October last year and performed 20 days of flights. Testing began with basic flight control and ended with obstacle avoidance near trees. Flights took place near trees eight of the 20 days with the aircraft successfully avoiding obstacles during 16 of 136 flights. On those flights the aircraft flew over 1.5km, detected 7,951 stereo matches, executed 163 trajectories and spent 131 seconds fl ying in autonomous mode with an average speed of 12.1 m/s (27 MPH). Photos courtesy of Ty Hedrick, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Andy Berry of MIT, who wrote his thesis based on this research U nmanned aircraft systems just can't fly as well as birds do. Despite the many design improve- ments being made as industry strives to imple- ment drone-based applications, even the most advanced drones simply don't have the agility and grace that comes so naturally to birds. Some researchers are working to change that. They're developing bird-inspired Unmanned THE ADVANTAGES OF BIRD-INSPIRED DRONES. Though small multi-rotor copters and fi xed-winged drones are the most popular forms of unmanned aircraft systems, there are new highly maneuverable, energy effi cient platforms emerging that take their design inspiration from the most experienced fl yers in history—birds. by Renee Knight DRONES take wing Aircraft Systems (UAS), the more formal name for unmanned aircraft, complete with adaptive wing structures for enhanced maneuverabil- ity and efficiency. They want these UAS to not only feel the environmental conditions around them, but to respond to those conditions—mak- ing them even better equipped for commercial applications ranging from crop monitoring to search and rescue. Researchers including biologist Ty Hedrick of the Hedrick Lab at University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, studied swallows to help create a UAS with detect and avoid capabilities.

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