Author Topic: Return of the gull-wing  (Read 332 times)

Offline indy007

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3294
Return of the gull-wing
« on: August 24, 2005, 02:58:04 PM »
neat stuff - Bandwidth may take a hit shortly, it was slashdot'd. Video links are on the page.

Quote

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The military’s next generation of airborne drones won’t be just small and silent – they’ll also dive between buildings, zoom under overpasses and land on apartment balconies.

At least, that’s what University of Florida engineers are working toward.

Funded by the U.S. Air Force and NASA, UF aerospace engineers have built prototypes of 6-inch- to 2-foot- drones capable of squeezing in and out of tight spots in cities — like tiny urban stunt planes. Their secret: seagull-inspired wings that “morph,” or change shape, dramatically during flight, transforming the planes’ stability and agility at the touch of a button on the operator’s remote control.

“If you fly in the urban canyon, through alleys, around parking garages and between buildings, you need to do sharp turns, spins and dives,” said Rick Lind, a UF assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering who heads the project. “That means you need to change the shape of the aircraft during flight.”

The Air Force’s Predator Unmanned Aerial Vehicle and other military drones have been key to military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the drones, which shoot surveillance images and sometimes also fire missiles, are designed to soar high above the landscape. That limits their ability to snoop up close in the windows, alleys, corners and other urban crevices of the tight neighborhoods that define many cities, Lind said.

The UF planes are intended to correct this deficiency and add new capabilities, such as landing in tight spots during a mission. That could be useful, for example, if the planes, equipped with sensors for biological or chemical weapons, were investigating single buildings where the weapons were suspected of being made, Lind said.

Lind came to UF in 2001 from NASA, where one of his last projects involved modifying the wings of an F-18 fighter to change shape during flight. He drew on this research for the drones, but he also had another source of inspiration: the Wright brothers’ first plane.

As Lind noted, unlike later planes, the wings of that biplane had no flaps, or ailerons. Instead, the brothers controlled the plane’s roll by using cables to twist the shape of the wings up and down during flight. Birds also change wing shape.

“Birds morph all the time, and they’re very agile,” Lind said. “There’s no reason we can’t achieve the same control that birds achieve.”

The first prototype in the 3-year-old UF effort copied the Wright Brothers’ approach by using tiny motors to twist threads and move flexible wings. A traditional rudder and elevators on the tail, meanwhile, control up-and-down and side-to-side motions.

The downfall of the thread approach was that the wings could only be pulled down, not pushed up, which limited their capabilities. The next version replaced the threads with metal rods, allowing both up and down motion and improving performance.

The latest version, built by mechanical and aerospace engineering doctoral student Mujahid Abdulrahim, goes a step further. Impressed by seagulls’ ability to hover, dive and climb rapidly, Abdulrahim photographed the gulls close-up during flight. The images showed the gulls’ wings flexing at both their shoulder and elbow joints as they altered flight patterns.

Abdulrahim added this ability in the new prototype, with promising results. With the wings mimicking the gulls’ elbow in the down position, the plane loses stability but becomes highly maneuverable. With the wings in the elbow straight position, it glides well. And with the wings in the elbow up position, it’s highly controllable and easy to land.

Motors can transform the wings from the down to the up position in flight in 12 seconds, “fast enough to use in a city landscape,” Abdulrahim said.

The bird-like prototypes are strikingly maneuverable, capable, for example, of completing three, 360-degree rolls in one second. (An F-16 fighter jet can manage at least one roll per second, but three rolls would produce excessive gravity force, killing the pilot). Flying in videotaped demonstrations, they are so agile they appear out of control at times, and indeed the planes require considerable talent by the remote control pilot.

The Air Force and NASA have so far provided about $3 million for the UF research, a substantial portion of which is aimed at addressing that issue by making the planes easier to fly. The engineers’ goal is to make the planes autonomous, or flyable without human pilots. That won’t be easy, but it would give the planes remarkable utility. ”If the vehicle can search an area by itself, you have almost instantaneous response to what’s being threatened,” Lind said.

Lind, Abdulrahim and other researchers involved in the effort have authored nine academic papers on the research, including two on the gull-wing aircraft

Offline Seagoon

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2396
      • http://www.providencepca.com
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #1 on: August 24, 2005, 03:26:20 PM »
Way Cool, thanks for the link.

A while back I was speaking with a fighter pilot at Pope. He was talking about leaving flying for a desk job, which I commented must be irritating when he commented along the lines of "Well, most of us accept that someday no one in the airforce will actually fly..." The technology is apparently rapidly outstripping the human body's ability to keep up.

I was idly wondering if someday we might have a competition to see if the HTC team can design a drone that can outfly and shoot down the best of the human Aces High players in the DA. Maybe something for a future convention?

- SEAGOON
SEAGOON aka Pastor Andy Webb
"We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion... Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." - John Adams

Offline AKS\/\/ulfe

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 4287
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #2 on: August 24, 2005, 03:32:19 PM »
Somehow it seems that technology will not just be used on foreign soil.
-SW

Offline indy007

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3294
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #3 on: August 24, 2005, 03:39:37 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by AKS\/\/ulfe
Somehow it seems that technology will not just be used on foreign soil.
-SW


Probably not, the applications are only limited by the imagination. Disposable drones, imho, are the "next big thing". Few examples off the top of my head...

* Throw one out of a police helo, let it go down and pop tires on a fleeing car in a high speed chase. Beats the danger to dismounted officers deploying spike strips.

* Could zoom down and get really close up shots of license plates of people running red lights.

* Let loose an autonomous "flock" to circle over manufacturing/processing plants hunting for leaks, hot-spots, etc.

I wouldn't expect this stuff in the next 10 years (Moore's law & all that), but most likely in our lifetimes.

Offline Maverick

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 13958
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #4 on: August 24, 2005, 03:41:43 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by AKS\/\/ulfe
Somehow it seems that technology will not just be used on foreign soil.
-SW


I suppose you should have started out yelling: The sky is falling the sky is falling!!!! :rolleyes:
DEFINITION OF A VETERAN
A Veteran - whether active duty, retired, national guard or reserve - is someone who, at one point in their life, wrote a check made payable to "The United States of America", for an amount of "up to and including my life."
Author Unknown

Offline AKS\/\/ulfe

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 4287
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #5 on: August 24, 2005, 03:44:42 PM »
Or I could be naive and believe that a lot of military technology has not found its way into local police forces to be used against civilians. Then follow that up with a ghey rolleye emoticon.
-SW

Offline Chairboy

  • Probation
  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 8221
      • hallert.net
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #6 on: August 24, 2005, 03:47:17 PM »
Other potential uses: Commerce.

The owls in the Harry Potter books might be closer to describing the future of package delivery then we think.  Imagine fleets of cheap, maneuverable drones navigating from point to point, dropping off and picking up lightweight packages such as food, mail, and other parcels and transporting them.

Distributed digital networks and 'mesh' technologies combined with advanced manufacturing techniques precision positioning devices (such as WAAS GPS enhancements) make such a future not only possible, but probable.

The postman of the future may not be driving a Segway, and he probably won't have to worry about dogs.  But he, or perhaps 'it' is more appropriate, will undoubtedly have to watch out for flying cars and, ironically, predatory owls.

This is Chairboy reporting to you from...  the future.
"When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." - Sinclair Lewis

Offline indy007

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3294
Return of the gull-wing
« Reply #7 on: August 24, 2005, 03:53:38 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Seagoon
Way Cool, thanks for the link.

A while back I was speaking with a fighter pilot at Pope. He was talking about leaving flying for a desk job, which I commented must be irritating when he commented along the lines of "Well, most of us accept that someday no one in the airforce will actually fly..." The technology is apparently rapidly outstripping the human body's ability to keep up.



I'm waiting on the first truly "Unlimited" race car series. Call it the "Anything Goes Games". Drivers would be a serious hinderance. We'll be cheering on our favorite teams of engineers and watching polymorphic cars pull 5-7 lateral g, drive on inverted tracks, and see neat new features like grilles inserted into the track to interrupt downforce suction fans (which are already banned). I'm a geek. I can't wait :)

Quote

I was idly wondering if someday we might have a competition to see if the HTC team can design a drone that can outfly and shoot down the best of the human Aces High players in the DA. Maybe something for a future convention?

- SEAGOON


Probably be pretty easy. Especially since we have lots of charts with all the variables written out, climb rates, dive speeds, fuel loads, ammo weight, max rates of turn, instant turn rate, compression speeds, flap deployment speeds. It could do the math alot more perfectly and alot faster than any person.
« Last Edit: August 24, 2005, 04:08:51 PM by indy007 »