AeroVironment builds first
HAWK30 pseudo-satellite
02
AY, 2019 - SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM - BY:
GARRETT REIM
CHICAGO
AeroVironment has completed assembly of its first HAWK30 high-altitude
pseudo-satellite (HAPS) and started manufacturing a second example in April
2019.
The company is building the solar-powered flying wing for HAPSMobile,
its joint venture with Japanese telecommunications firm SoftBank. It took the
company about 24 months to complete the first aircraft at one of its facilities
in Simi Valley, California.
Softbank believes the HAWK30 could be providing service as soon as
2023. A follow-on variant of the aircraft, dubbed HAPS50, is also in the
pipeline.
AeroVironment HAPS30
AeroVironment
The solar-powered HAWK30 has a wingspan of approximately 79m (260ft),
is propelled by 10 electric motors and carries lithium ion batteries. It has a
cruise speed of 59kt (110km/h). The unmanned air vehicle (UAV) is designed to
carry cellular network transmitting equipment aloft for up to 6 months at a
time in the stratosphere – about 65,000ft.
At that altitude, the aircraft is above the clouds enabling it to
generate maximum solar power and enabling it to beam cellular data down to
Earth over an area of about 3.14 million ha (7.76 million acres). For example,
it would take approximately 40 HAWK30s flying at once to provide internet
coverage for all of Japan, Softbank estimates.
AeroVironment has experience building high-altitude, long-endurance
flying wings. Between 1997 and 2001, it built several HAPS aircraft for NASA,
including the Pathfinder, which flew to 71,000ft; the Pathfinder Plus, which
flew to 80,000ft; and the Helios, which flew to 97,000ft.
Since, the company says the basic underlying technology of HAPS
aircraft – solar panels, batteries and electronic payloads – have become
smaller, lighter and more powerful. As a result, a HAPS-based cellular network
now appears to be more feasible than ever before.
“The efficiency, the flexibility and the cost of solar panels has
changed dramatically,” says Steve Gitlin, vice president of corporate strategy
for AeroVironment. “The ability to integrate different solar panels into
different kinds of designs has improved.”
Ultimately, the HAWK30 could provide internet access to people living
in remote areas or to areas that have had their communications infrastructure
destroyed by a natural disaster, says AeroVironment. The company thinks it
could also supplement areas that already have coverage via cell towers. The
company declines to say what market it believes would be most lucrative.
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