NASA'S EXPERIMENTAL SAILPLANE SOARS LIKE A BIRD

Friday, October 07 2005 @ 09:24 AM EDT

Edited by: Kandy Ringer

NASA News

Briefs and Releases

BBSNews 2005

Compiled by Kandy Ringer

New Experimental Sailplane Soars for NASA

NASA via BBSNews - 2005-10-07 -- With the graceful flight of hawks and eagles in mind, NASA aerospace engineer Michael Allen recently hand-launched a 15-pound motorized model sailplane over the Southern California desert. He was hoping it would catch plumes of rising air called thermals.

A NASA model motorized sailplane catches a thermal during one of 17 flights to demonstrate that updrafts can extend flight time and save energy for small UAVs.
A NASA model motorized sailplane catches a thermal during one of 17 flights to demonstrate that updrafts can extend flight time and save energy for small UAVs.

Photo Credit: NASA photo by Carla Thomas

For the image shown above in a larger size, see Experimental Soarplane.

More NASA images are available in BBSNews NASA Photos.

The sailplane did just that several times without human intervention during a series of research flights at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Calif. The tests validated Allen's premise that using thermal lift could significantly extend the range and flight endurance of small unmanned air vehicles. Thermal lift increases vehicle endurance and saves fuel. This is significant, as small vehicle flight duration is often restricted by limited fuel capacity.

Allen and his team of engineers and technicians flew the remote-controlled RnR Products sailplane 17 times from July through mid-September. The sailplane was modified by Dryden aerospace technicians to incorporate a small electric motor and an autopilot programmed to detect thermals.

The 14-foot-wingspan model flew to an altitude of about 1,000 feet. The ground-based remote control pilot then handed off control to the sailplane's onboard autopilot. The autopilot software flew the plane on a pre-determined course over the northern portion of Rogers Dry Lake at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., until it detected an updraft. As the aircraft rose with the updraft, the engine automatically shut off. The aircraft circled to stay within the lift from the updraft.

Allen said the small sailplane added 60 minutes to its endurance by autonomous thermal soaring. The modified sailplane gained an average altitude in 23 updrafts of 565 feet, and in one strong thermal ascended 2,770 feet.

"The flights demonstrated a small unmanned vehicle can mimic birds and exploit the free energy that exists in the atmosphere," Allen said. "We have been able to gather useful and unique data on updrafts and the response of the aircraft in updrafts. This will further the technology and refine the algorithms used."

Small, portable, unpiloted, long-endurance vehicles could fulfill a number of observation roles including forest fire monitoring, traffic control, search and rescue.

For more information about flight research at Dryden on the Web visit: Dryden Flight Research Center.

For information about NASA and agency programs on the Web, visit: NASA Home.

###

Comments (0)


BBSNews
http://bbsnews.net/article.php/2005100709240786