UAVs and UCAVs

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DARPA Taps Firms for New UAS Effort

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has awarded contracts to five defense firms to develop ideas for new unmanned aerial systems that will serve the U.S. Navy's newest combat ships. The contracts went to Aurora Flight Sciences in Manassas, Va., Carter Aviation in Wichita Falls, Texas, Maritime Applied Physics Corp., in Baltimore, Md., AeroEnvironment in Monrovia, Calif., and Northrup Grumman in Falls Church, Va. Each of the contracts is valued at less than $3 million, and will be used by each company to develop concepts for DARPA's Tactically Exploited Reconnaissance Node, or TERN, program, according to a recent press release. The new UAS will be expected to provide video and other reconnaissance data for both peaceful and battle operations, and the aircraft will need to be launched from a variety of Navy ships, including the new Littoral Combat Ship. Many of these ships have little room for a landing strip, so the TERN UASs must be capable of very short take offs and landings. To meet this short take-off and landing requirement, Carter Aviation plans to offer its Slowed Rotor/Compound technology that uses a slowly turning rotor to act as a fixed wing for efficient level flight, but can spin up the rotor for vertical take-offs, the release states. The other vendors will all have their own concepts to meet the terms of the DARPA contract. DARPA has announced that there will be follow-on contracts once the initial concepts have been developed and reviewed.


http://defensetech.org/2013/12/19/darpa-taps-firms-for-new-uas-effort/
 
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Israel drone manufacturing booms

Israel drone manufacturing booms



The Drone market is booming worldwide, moving so quickly that aviation experts predict unmanned aerial vehicle sales will soon take the largest market share of all aircraft sales. The front-running drone exporter is, surprisingly, not the U.S., it's Israel.

In the world of new age surveillance and cutting-edge military technology, UAVs are the path of the future unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, outfitted with advanced radar, cameras, satellite communications, infrared sensors and missiles can be put to use for everything from spying on neighbor countries to executing precision hits on targets Within the realm of unmanned systems, Israel is the world's top exporter.

A report released earlier this year by international consulting firm Frost and Sullivan cites Israel's Unmanned Aerial System exports at four and a half billion dollars between the years 2005 to 2012. The top clients are the UK, Brazil and India.

For a tiny country - population eight million - elevated export numbers are attributed to several factors. Main competitor, the United States, probably produces more drones, but strict export limitations and internal supply demand cut down on numbers of drones being shipped out. And Israel offers potential buyers options they can't get anywhere else.

With prohibitive price tags - 140 million dollars for this Global Hawk - interested clients can sample the technology and pay by the hour, week, month or year and return the drone when the contract expires. UAV demand is expanding, and incorporating drones in civil realms is growing. Experts say Israel's continuous upgrade and innovation in response to market demand keeps the country's UAV industry in a front-running, competitive slot.

The next level is domestic aviation - unmanned cargo movement and farther down the road, pilotless commercial flights.
 

cobra commando

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Autonomous Aerial Cargo/
Utility System (AACUS)


http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xqwS7CcjA28

The Office of Naval Research (ONR) demonstrates the Autonomous Aerial Cargo/Utility System (AACUS), which gives helicopters the capability for unmanned flight. AACUS consists of software and sensors that can be applied to a variety of rotary wing aircraft, and will provide the U.S. Marine Corps with the ability to rapidly support forces on the front lines, as an alternative to convoys, manned aircraft or air drops in all weather and possibly hostile conditions, with minimal training required by the requestor.
 

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The unmanned X-47B conducts its first night flight April 10 over Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md. Night flights are the next incremental step in developing the operations concept for more routine UAS flight activity. The Navy will continue to execute X-47B test events to mature standard operating procedures for cooperative use of the airspace with manned aircraft.

U.S. Navy X-47B UCAS completes first night flight | global aviation report
 

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Arcturus UAV enables VTOL for fixed-wing UAVs



Arcturus UAV has introduced a new vertical takeoff and landing system to enhance launch and recovery processes for its T-20 and T-16 fixed wing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The system, called JUMP, was unveiled on 22 April. The JUMP system is a boom fitted with lift motors and rotors that can be mounted to each wing of the UAV to provide vertical lift for takeoff and landing. The company designed the system to bring the versatility of quad rotor take-off while retaining the range and endurance of fixed wing flight. Once in flight, transition to fixed- wing flight is delivered by the Piccolo autopilot using Latitude Engineering's Hybrid-Quadrotor technology. Vertical lift motors are shut off for winged flight and propellers are feathered longitudinally for minimum drag. UAVs using the JUMP system require no special launch equipment and do not require runways for launch or landing. JUMP can be set up and ready for flight in less than 15 minutes once on site, and it can be transported by two technicians. D'Milo Hallerberg, president, Arcturus UAV, said: 'This is a pivotal moment in the history of small UAVs. JUMP is to UAVs what the touch screen was to smart phones. [It] makes exciting UAV technology much more useful.'

Arcturus UAV enables VTOL for fixed-wing UAVs - News - Shephard
 

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"Optionally Piloted" Black Hawk Takes to the Air
By David Szondy
Gizmag
April 23, 2014



While autonomous aircraft are now a well established part of military operations, there are some areas where "pilot optional" is still very much synonymous with "cutting edge." Case in point is Optionally Piloted Black Hawk (OPBH) Demonstrator developed by the Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. In cooperation with the US Army, Sikorsky demonstrated the helicopter's capabilities for the first time in an autonomous cargo delivery exercise on March 11 at Sikorsky's Development Flight Center.

The Sikorsky Black Hawk has been the mainstay of the US armed forces since it went into service in 1979 and over the years has been adapted to a wide range of missions, but one constant is that it's needed a pilot at the controls. True, autopilots have been around for many decades, but pilot optional technology goes a step further and brings some obvious advantages. It would allow routine flights, such as ferrying aircraft, to be conducted without needing a pilot on board, or it could expand the capabilities of a manned aircraft because pilot boredom and fatigue is much less of a factor while the computers take over routine duties.

Unfortunately, not all aircraft and not all missions are easy to place in the pilot optional basket. Helicopters in general can be tricky and the Black Hawk is a special challenge because its function as a go-anywhere-do-anything workhorse means that it has to operate in some pretty hairy conditions.

Aimed at providing the Army with a an autonomous cargo delivery capability, the OPBH demonstration involved flying a fully autonomous cargo mission from takeoff, to picking up a cargo, to dropping it off at its destination, then returning for another load while under the supervision of a man-portable Ground Control Station (GCS).

It's the latest milestone in Sikorsky's Manned/Unmanned Resupply Aerial Lifter (MURAL) Program which began in 2007. MURAL includes such partners as the US Army Aviation Development Directorate (ADD), the U.S. Army Utility Helicopters Project Office (UH PO) as well as Sikorsky. Using a pair of UH-60MU Black Hawk helicopters as test beds, its goal is to produce pilot optional cargo aircraft.

According to Sikorsky, a major factor in achieving this goal is the company's Matrix Technology, which provides and fixed wing vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) with intelligent flight systems that can carry out complex missions at low, obstacle-strewn altitudes with a minimum of human supervision. The ultimate goal is to give aircraft like the Black Hawk much more autonomy, letting the pilot act as a coordinator rather than being constantly on the stick and allowing them to leave the cockpit during the run up to a potentially dangerous mission. This would not only allow for more mission flexibility and increase the Black Hawk's mission capabilities, but would also increase very basic things like flying range by reducing pilot fatigue.

"The autonomous Black Hawk helicopter provides the commander with the flexibility to determine crewed or un-crewed operations, increasing sorties while maintaining crew rest requirements," says Mark Miller, Sikorsky Vice President of Research & Engineering. "This allows the crew to focus on the more 'sensitive' operations, and leaves the critical resupply missions for autonomous operations without increasing fleet size or mix."


"Optionally piloted" Black Hawk takes to the air
 

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Lockheed Indago UAV ready for deployment

Lockheed Martin has announced that its Indago quadrotor unmanned air vehicle and a new handheld ground control station (GCS) have reached operational readiness. A number of the company's other recently acquired UAVs and related systems have also been approved. Indago, a vertical take-off and landing aircraft, can provide situational awareness during emergency response efforts, including search and rescue and disaster relief missions, Lockheed says. The VTOL UAV operates within line-of-sight from the control station, up to about 3nm (5km). The unit weighs 2.2kg (4.9lb) and is 0.8m (2.7ft) across. Indago can be flown for up to 45min using the handheld GCS, which has a 4h battery life and can also be used to control other types of unmanned aircraft. Indago was developed by Procerus Technologies, which Lockheed acquired in 2012. Lockheed has also launched its commercial avionics suite – a low-cost product that will allow it to sell UAVs to both commercial and military customers. The new equipment uses fewer waypoints and has a smaller communications range than avionics offered to military or law enforcement operators, the company says.

Lockheed Indago UAV ready for deployment - 4/30/2014 - Flight Global
 

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Wifi on the Fly: Drones to
Deliver Mobile Hotspots


The military may soon be deploying air-mobile hotspots so that troops operating in remote locations can communicate with support units. The Defense Advance Research Projects Agency, or DARAPA, said Phase 2 of the program began in March with teams integrating the developing technology into pods that will be mounted onto RQ-7 Shadow UAVs and mobile ground vehicles. The Shadow, which weighs from 187 pounds to 375 pounds, depending on mission payload, is used for surveillance and reconnaissance by Army and Marine Corps units. "The successes—and the novel networking approaches needed to maintain these high-capacity links —are key to providing forward deployed units with the same high-capacity connectivity we all enjoy over our 4G cell-phone networks," DARPA Program Manager Dick Ridgway said in a statement. The plan is to provide tactical units operating remotely with 1 gigabyte-per-second, or Gb/s, of reliable communications backbone. For the program DARPA developed steerable millimeter- wave antennas that quickly pick up, track and establish communications links between moving air and ground vehicles, low-noise amplifiers that boost communication signals while minimizing noise and more efficient millimeter-wave amplification necessary for long- range operation. The agency also developed new approaches for overcoming network and connectivity problems related to signal blockages stemming from terrain. The Mobile Hotspot technology has been packaged in a so-called L-SWAP – for Low-Size, Weight, and Power – pod, which can be made compatible not only with ground vehicles, but also the RQ-7 Shadow unmanned aerial vehicle.


Read more here:
http://defensetech.org/2014/05/05/wifi-on-the-fly-drones-to-deliver-mobile-hotspots/
 

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Wifi on the Fly: Drones to
Deliver Mobile Hotspots


The military may soon be deploying air-mobile hotspots so that troops operating in remote locations can communicate with support units. The Defense Advance Research Projects Agency, or DARAPA, said Phase 2 of the program began in March with teams integrating the developing technology into pods that will be mounted onto RQ-7 Shadow UAVs and mobile ground vehicles. The Shadow, which weighs from 187 pounds to 375 pounds, depending on mission payload, is used for surveillance and reconnaissance by Army and Marine Corps units. "The successes—and the novel networking approaches needed to maintain these high-capacity links —are key to providing forward deployed units with the same high-capacity connectivity we all enjoy over our 4G cell-phone networks," DARPA Program Manager Dick Ridgway said in a statement. The plan is to provide tactical units operating remotely with 1 gigabyte-per-second, or Gb/s, of reliable communications backbone. For the program DARPA developed steerable millimeter- wave antennas that quickly pick up, track and establish communications links between moving air and ground vehicles, low-noise amplifiers that boost communication signals while minimizing noise and more efficient millimeter-wave amplification necessary for long- range operation. The agency also developed new approaches for overcoming network and connectivity problems related to signal blockages stemming from terrain. The Mobile Hotspot technology has been packaged in a so-called L-SWAP – for Low-Size, Weight, and Power – pod, which can be made compatible not only with ground vehicles, but also the RQ-7 Shadow unmanned aerial vehicle.


Read more here:
http://defensetech.org/2014/05/05/wifi-on-the-fly-drones-to-deliver-mobile-hotspots/
Streaming tactical 3D 4K p0rn FTW !!!
 

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Northrop Grumman's MQ-8C Fire Scout to Undergo Electromagnetic
Interference Tests In Prep for Ship-based Flights



Fire Scouts team up: Two MQ-8 Fire Scouts sit in the Electromagnetic Environmental Effects (E3) facility at NAS Patuxent River, Md., May 1. The MQ-8B, left, recently equipped with a maritime search radar, and the new, larger MQ-8C, right, will both undergo testing to evaluate the unmanned helicopters' capability with other shipboard systems. (Photo Courtesy of U.S. Navy)

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