Arizona University prepares pilots to fly unmanned
aircraft
PRESCOTT, AZ (CBS5) -Aviation schools say there could soon be an
increased demand for pilots, but not necessarily the kind who will fly you and
your family to New York.
We're talking about pilots for unmanned
aircraft, or drones.
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University is one of only three universities in the country offering a
program in UAS (unmanned aircraft systems). And the university is seeing more
and more interest every year.
"We started in the early days with about
five or 10 students. And that quickly mushroomed, and we're a student body of
under 2,000, so 40 out of 2,000 is a significant portion of our student body,"
said ERAU Chancellor Dr. Frank Ayers.
The future is
looking bright for the program.
"We see the program probably continuing
to grow 10 or 15, 20 students a year, to a size of 200 or 300 students," Ayers
said.
Currently, Embry-Riddle Prescott only offers a minor in UAS, but it
could be offered as a major in the future.
"If it comes together as a
major, it still needs to have the disciplines of engineering, aviation, of
security, business, and intelligence all combined together," said
Ayers.
Students tell us that flying an unmanned aircraft carries a whole
different set of challenges.
"Unmanned is a lot about the systems
integration and making it autonomous and then actually getting it in the air
flying by itself, hopefully operating on its own for the most part," said
student Nick Harris.
In addition to military use, future unmanned
aircraft are expected to be used in police, fire, search-and-rescue, and
agriculture.
"It's kind of an extension of the automation that we already
put into aircraft. But unmanned is going to make a big jump once we can work the
safety issues out, and I think most of our business is going to be in that
area," added professor Dr. Thomas Gally.
The university also features a
lab where manned and unmanned aircraft are flown simultaneously, the only one of
its type in the country.
"We're able to incorporate, and kind of simulate
unmanned systems in the national airspace system," said student Zachary
Beard.
Embry-Riddle added that on Thursday, a professor and student left
for the Philippines with an unmanned aircraft that will aid in aerial mapping
following last month's devastating typhoon.
In addition to Embry-Riddle,
the University of North Dakota and Kansas State University are the only
institutions offering either a major or minor in UAS
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