Dette er åpenbart veien å gå i urbane trafikkerte områder hvor UAM`er kommer til å "herje" om noen år. (Red.)
Honeywell
Smart Drone Radar Avoids Collisions Automatically
A drone piloted by the Honeywell IntuVue RDR-84K radar system has triumphed in a high-stakes game of dodgeball, repeatedly swerving around intruder aircraft in a series of tests that are key to the future of pilotless aviation.
Recently
conducted in the Phoenix area,
the tests showed that the radar can not only detect airborne traffic but can
also decide autonomously on a course of action. The radar can take over
navigation and pilot an aircraft to safety using its onboard processor.
“We set up the
ultimate game of ‘chicken,’ but the RDR-84K simply wouldn’t let these aircraft
get into danger,” said Sapan
Shah, product manager, Advanced Air Mobility, Honeywell
Aerospace. “This is a leap forward in safety that could have far-ranging
impacts across aviation.”
Avoiding
unforeseen objects is a key requirement for autonomous drones and other
aircraft that fly beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) of an operator. However,
this detect-and-avoid capability is extremely difficult in the air. Radars must
have long ranges because of the high speeds involved, and they must pick out
airborne traffic from ground clutter, including moving cars. They also require
precise location information to make sense of radar echoes.
This is difficult
on the ground and even more complex in the sky. To compensate, pilots, and even
huge air traffic control radars, rely on cooperative aircraft to beam out their
locations using onboard transponders. Objects without transponders — hobby
drones, kites, birds and aircraft with broken transponders — are known as
“noncooperating” traffic.
The RDR-84K,
which is the size of a paperback book, has proven its ability to detect noncooperating
traffic during extensive testing while mounted on helicopters and drones. But
the new tests marked the first time it has performed the avoidance function
without human intervention.
With both drones
on autopilot, Honeywell engineers flew two quadcopter drones directly at each other 300
feet above the ground at a test site in the desert.
Sjekk video her: https://tinyurl.com/m75ftd9p
In multiple flights, the drone equipped with the RDR-84K detected the noncooperating
“intruder” drone and evaluated its flight path. Then it calculated an avoidance
maneuver and took over navigation — flying left, right, up, down or stopping
midair, depending on winds and other factors.
Once the danger
of a collision had passed, the radar released control of the drone, and the
autopilot guided it back to its original course.
“This was all
automatic,” said Larry
Surace, lead systems engineer for the RDR-84K, Honeywell
Aerospace. “The radar recognized the danger, decided on a course of action,
flew to safety and then made sure the danger had passed — all without input
from anyone on the ground.”
The team then
challenged the RDR-84K with increasingly difficult encounters, such as
approaching from below to blend into ground clutter and from offset angles,
testing the radar’s peripheral vision and high angular detection capabilities.
In other flights, the team instructed the radar to wait longer before acting,
forcing it to make more aggressive maneuvers.
“The radar
handled everything we threw at it,” Surace said. “It saw the danger immediately
and successfully executed multiple avoidance maneuvers.”
Compared with
most aircraft radars, the RDR-84K is tiny, weighing less than 2 pounds. Its
face is only 8 inches wide and 4 inches high, and it is about 1 inch deep. Its
onboard processor calculates avoidance paths, meaning aircraft do not need a
separate computer to do this work.
Despite its small
size, the radar can see targets 3 kilometers away. It uses monopulse technology
— a system of overlapping beams — to increase accuracy and eliminate ground
clutter. The radar steers its beams electronically, so it has no moving parts.
In addition to
detecting traffic, the RDR-84K can map terrain and provide alternate navigation
in the case of GPS failure. It can also act as a radar altimeter during
landing.
The RDR-84K is
part of Honeywell’s Beyond-Visual-Line-of-Sight
suite of technologies, along with the small UAV satellite
communications transmitter, hydrogen fuel cells and inertial navigation
systems. These technologies are aimed at extending the range of uncrewed
aircraft.
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