Five years airborne for future UAVs
Monday, November 02, 2009
A US government project to develop unmanned aerial vehicles capable of staying in flight for five years has entered its second phase.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is looking for designs for its Vulture programme. The UAVs must be able to remain at 60-90,000 feet for years at a time, surviving the jet stream winds found at those altitudes. The designs must also be able to provide 5kw of power and carry a 1,000lb payload, allowing the Vulture II to act as a communications and sensor platform.
Three teams - Aurora Flight Sciences, Boeing Integrated Defense and Lockheed Martin - are competing for $155m to build a small-scale demonstration model of the Vulture II high-altitude UAV.
Each design is currently relying on solar power during the day and battery power overnight.
The current phase of the Vulture project, which is expected to run until mid-2012, will end with an uninterrupted three-month flight demonstration by the three teams.
HAVE YOUR SAY
The Vulture project does actually have relevance to the UK - Boeing Integrated Defense's partner for its bid is actually QinetiQ with proposals to use technologies from the company's Zeyphr solar-powered High Altitude Long Endurance UAV, which currently holds the unofficial world record for the longest unmanned flight. Given that this is a British-centric site and I don't recall reading about US programmes on here before, I think that is quite an important point that you missed.
Michael - UK