torsdag 14. desember 2017

Drone - Bird strikes - Denne kan bidra til å holder fugler unna sensitive områder - Curt Lewis



Where birds and planes collide, a winged robot may help




The bird, apparently a female falcon, wheels into view 100 feet over Edmonton International Airport, flapping her wings - hunting behaviour. She pursues a flock of starlings, which scatter into the safety of the woods. The falcon is majestic, graceful and resolute.

She is also a machine - a battery, sensors, GPS, barometer and flight control computer stuffed into a falcon-shaped, hand-painted exterior. A human on the ground controls her wings.

The Robird patrols the skies around the airport, in Alberta, Canada. Her mission is to mimic falcon behaviour in order to head off a serious threat to aviation: the bird strike, which happens when a bird or flock collides with an airplane. The Robird doesn't actually catch any prey. Its job is to alert birds to the presence of a predator, herd them away from the airport, and teach them to prefer a less dangerous neighbourhood.


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