Skyborg makes its second
flight, this time autonomously piloting General Atomics’ Avenger drone
By: Valerie Insinna 1 day
ago
25
A General Atomics MQ-20
Avenger unmanned vehicle returns to El Mirage Airfield, Calif. June 24, 2021.
The MQ-20 successfully participated in Edwards Air Force Base’s Orange Flag
21-2 to test the Skyborg Autonomy Core System. (General Atomics)
WASHINGTON —
The Air Force conducted a second flight test of the robot pilot known as Skyborg,
which autonomously flew a General Atomics MQ-20 Avenger drone June 24.
The event
comes about two months after the first flight of Skyborg autonomy core system (ACS) aboard the
Kratos UTAP-22 Mako, and proves that the system can be used to pilot multiple
types of unmanned aircraft.
“Flying the
Skyborg ACS on platforms from two different manufacturers demonstrates the
portability of the government-owned autonomy core, unlocking future
multi-mission capabilities for the Joint Force,” said Maj. Gen. Heather
Pringle, commander of Air Force Research Laboratory.
With Skyborg,
the Air Force hopes to eventually field an expendable loyal wingman-style drone that can accompany manned
tactical jets into battle, taking on missions that may be too dangerous for
human fighter pilots.
The MQ-20
flight took place during the Orange Flag exercise at Edwards Air Force Base,
Calif., over a period of about two hours and 30 minutes. After a human operator
launched the Avenger drone and flew it to a safe altitude, it passed control of
the aircraft to the ACS, the Air Force said in a statement.
“The ACS
accomplished basic aviation behaviors and responded to navigational commands,
while reacting to geo-fences, adhering to aircraft flight envelopes, and
demonstrating coordinated maneuvering,” the service stated.
Air Force
personnel at a nearby ground command and control station monitored the flight.
While
initially the program will be focused on “demonstrating an open, modular ACS
that can autonomously aviate, navigate, and communicate,” the service
eventually wants to integrate more advanced artificial intelligence and machine
learning capabilities into the Skyborg brain.
The Air Force
is testing the Skyborg ACS with three drone manufacturers, which were awarded contracts in December 2020.
Kratos received a $37.7 million, General Atomics got $14.3 million, and Boeing
— the only company who has not yet paired its drone with the ACS — got $25.7
million.
According to
the service, “future Skyborg experimentation events will explore direct
manned-unmanned teaming between manned aircraft and multiple ACS-controlled
unmanned aircraft.”
Skyborg is one
of the Air Force’s Vanguard programs — four high-priority efforts where AFRL is
using prototyping and experimentation to try to push groundbreaking technology
forward.
Pringle serves as chief
technology officer of the Skyborg program, while Brig. Gen. Dale White, the
service’s executive for fighters and advanced aircraft, executes the
acquisition side of the program.
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