Zephyr Drone Has Been Flying For 17 Days From Arizona
To Belize
The solar powered Zephyr S was last
tracked over the Gulf of Mexico after having flown from its Arizona test area
to Belize.
BYJOSEPH TREVITHICKJUL 1, 2022
7:14 PM
JOSEPH TREVITHICKView Joseph Trevithick's Articles
An Airbus' Zephyr S solar-powered, very-high-altitude
unmanned aircraft is in the midst of a long-duration test flight and has
already been aloft for 17 days so far. The drone, sometimes described as a
pseudo-satellite in terms of potential capabilities, took off from the U.S.
Army's Yuma Proving
Ground in Arizona last month for what the service says
is a test of its highly efficient long-endurance flight characteristics as part
of broader work to demonstrate its ability to serve as a persistent sensor
platform.
The Zephyr S in question, a design originally known as the Zephyr 8, was first spotted on online flight tracking software taking off from an airstrip at Yuma Proving Ground (YPG) on June 15. For the next ten days, the unmanned aircraft, which has been using the callsign Zulu 82, flew various patterns over the adjacent Yuma Test Range and Kofa National Wildlife Refuge. This isn't an uncommon sight as Zephyr has been undergoing testing high above YPG for some time now. What it did next, on the other hand, was uncommon.
On June 23, the Zephyr S's flight activity began to include runs to the southeast roughly parallel to Arizona's border with Mexico, but the drone continue to spend most of its time in the air around YPG. Two days later, it departed the Yuma area, following a route along the southwestern border of the United States toward the Gulf of Mexico.
The
Zephyr S heading southeast toward the Gulf of Mexico on June 26. ADS-B
Exchange
It arrived over the Gulf of Mexico on June 27. It subsequently flew further south into the Caribbean Sea and then into the airspace over the Central American country of Belize.
Online flight tracking software shows that the drone left Belizean airspace yesterday and it now appears to be heading back to the United States. Flight tracking data from today appears to show it flying patterns over the Gulf of Mexico.
"The Assured Positioning, Navigation and
Timing/Space (APNT/Space) Cross-Functional Team (CFT) is experimenting with
[the Zephyr S] solar powered fixed-wing aircraft to demonstrate military
utility of long-duration assessments of various types of sensors," a
spokesperson for the APNT/Space CFT office, which is part of Army Futures
Command, told The War Zone in a
statement. "This experiment is intended to test the UAV's energy storage
capacity, battery longevity, solar panel efficiency, and station-keeping abilities."
The War Zone has
also reached out to Airbus for more information.
The Zephyr S's design is optimized for highly
efficient hight altitude flight. It has an 82-foot (25-meter) wingspan, but a
small central fuselage containing its avionics and datalinks. Its total weight
is just 165 pounds, light enough to be literally hand-launched by a small team
of people holding it over their heads while running it down the runway. It can
fly up to 76,100 feet (23,200 meters). How fast it can fly is unclear, but
its immediate predecessor, the smaller Zephyr 7, has a stated cruising speed of
around 30 knots.
It's unclear how long Zulu 82's current flight may
ultimately last. When the Zephyr S first flew in 2018, the drone remained
airborne for nearly 26 days. This stands to this day as the world
record for the longest duration flight by an unmanned
aircraft of any kind. That flight was enabled in part by improvements to
the design that ensured that it could remain at very high altitudes the entire
time. Older Zephyrs had to dip down to lower altitudes during multi-day
flights.
"Unlike previous flights when the aircraft had to
come down to between 25,000 and 35,000 feet at night, [but] this time we were
able to stay above the weather," Lori Slaughter, a test officer at
YPG, explained in
2019. "Our lowest altitude during the flight itself
was 55,000 feet."
This capability also means that the drone can evade
pretty much all bad weather, further improving its mission performance and
ability to stay on scene for very long periods.
The Zephyr 7 was the previous record holder, having
flown continuously for more than
14 days back in 2010. For comparison, the longest
flight, at least that we know about, ever completed by a Northrop Grumman RQ-4 Global
Hawk unmanned aircraft, the U.S. Air Force's current
premier high-altitude, lasted just
over 34 hours. The RQ-4 has a service ceiling of 60,000 feet, thousands
of feet below that of the Zephyr S.
Zephyr was originally developed by U.K. defense
contractor QinetiQ, which then sold the design to Airbus in 2013. The U.S.
military, including both the Army and the Navy, have been experimenting with
various Zephyr models since the late 2000s.
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