Posts Tagged ‘UAV pilot training’

Unmanned Aircraft Systems – UND Graduates New Generation of Aviation Professionals

Thursday, May 19th, 2011
UND - uas-grads-2011

University of North Dakota's first graduates of the Unmanned Aircraft Systems program

Among the nearly 1,500 receiving degrees from the University of North Dakota during spring commencement on Saturday, May 21st, will be the first graduates in the nation with degrees in unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) operations.

“It’s truly the first and only kind of its major program in the country at this point,” said Kent Lovelace, chair of the aviation department at the UND John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences. “These are the first graduates from anywhere in the country with a degree in UAS operations.”

The five students eligible for graduation are Christopher Burger, Ritzville, Wash.; Jeremy Duke, Everett, Wash.; Adam Julson, Flandreau, S.D.; Alexander Gustafson, Vashon Island, Wash.; and Brett Whalin, Rapid City, S.D. The commencement ceremony will be held at 1:30 p.m. in the Alerus Center at Grand Forks.

“Unmanned aircraft are having a profound impact on aerospace,” said Bruce Smith, dean of UND Aerospace. “We’re on the leading edge of UAS development. We now have 44 students signed up as majors and 78 students signed up for our UAS introductory course.”

Julson is excited about the opportunity to be part of an emerging aspect of aviation in which the sky is literally the limit. “What attracted me is that it’s the next big thing,” he said. “You’re on the forefront of the unmanned portion of aviation.”

For Duke, who worked for 10 years in the auto body industry before coming to UND, the attraction was the potential to apply UAS technology to weather research, which is the career direction he hopes to pursue.

“I flew weather modification missions for a summer and could see the application,” he said.

All the UAS majors are finding great interest from potential employers, and some have already lined up jobs. The field is expected to explode when the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) opens airspace to civilian applications.

Learn more about UND’s Unmanned Aircraft Systems programs.

Source: University of North Dakota Press Release

Air Force Testing Next Gen UAVs

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Next generation UAVs like Boeing's Phantom Ray, loosely based on the X-45 (pictured), will allow the military to use UAVs for even more missions.

Edwards Air Force Base will play host to several next generation UAVs over the next few weeks. These new drones are faster, fly higher, and employ stealth technologies.

One of the new aircraft, the Global Observer from AeroVironment Inc., has a wingspan similar to a Boeing 747 has already flown. It is able to fly for multiple days at altitudes of more than 65,000 feet. Operating at such altitudes, similar to those at which the venerable U2 spy plane operates, the Global Observer is out of the range of most antiaircraft missiles. It is capable of monitoring, in a single shot, an area of more than 275,000 square miles. When you consider that the entire country of Afghanistan only covers about 252,000 square miles, the Global Observer certainly lives up to its name allowing the Pentagon to constantly monitor entire war zones. At an estimated cost of $30 million dollars, it costs less and is more effective than spy satellites.

Northrop Grumman Corp., one of the big names in military aircraft, has brought their X-47B, which looks like their B-2 stealth bomber, to the table. Northrop Grumman’s next generation UAV has a large weapons bay that can carry laser-guided bombs and has aircraft carrier launch capabilities. Boeing, another big name manufacturer will also test their next generation UAV, the Phantom Ray which is designed to slip into enemy territory and destroy radar installations or other targets.

Current drones, like Predators or Reapers, have become very common in our current military engagements, but the new aircraft being tested at Edwards Air Force Base offer major technological improvements that will change the way the U.S. military uses UAVs. The most notable of those improvements are jet engines and stealth capabilities. Currently UAVs are not the fastest or stealthiest aircraft in the sky, so they don’t see much duty beyond surveillance support and aerial reconnaissance. With the newer more capable drones, like the X-47B and Phantom Ray, military personnel can deploy them for combat duties where stealth and speed are required to avoid detection, an area previously dominated by the current and next generation fighter jets, like the F-22 or F-35.

The largest part of what makes UAVs so attractive to the military are the reduced risk and cost of operating UAVs compared to other aircraft; however, the unique capabilities of drones like the new Global Observer don’t go unnoticed. While current UAVs can stay aloft for more than a day, next generation drones are edging toward staying up for more than a week, greatly improving the military’s reconnaissance and surveillance capabilities.

Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles, or UCAVs, are currently operated as remotely piloted aircraft that require a pilot to control the aircraft. Next generation UCAVs, like the X-47B, only require a pilot to design a detailed flight plan; the on-board computers guide it from takeoff to landing.

While these aircraft aren’t likely to see service in the next few years, they offer a glimpse of the innovations that are happening within the industry. As is often the case, similar technologies will eventually reach the civilian sector allowing UAVs to take over even more functions requiring more and more qualified, civilian UAV pilots.

For more information on unmanned aircraft systems training, check out our UAV/UAS Training Resource Center or find UAV/UAS training near you.

Source: New generation of unmanned spy planes is being tested
This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com.

UAVs Aid Arctic Study

Friday, December 31st, 2010

The catapult launched Scan Eagle UAV is helping researchers conduct the most detailed study of Arctic ice and wildlife to date.

An arctic study currently underway by the University of Colorado at Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to aid researchers who are studying changes in Arctic ice, weather, and wildlife, including seals and polar bears.

The project, headed up by Elizabeth Weatherhead of the University of Colorado at Boulder, is the first to use unmanned aircraft. It uses the Scan Eagle aircraft produced by Boeing and began in May of 2009. The study consisted of two to eight hour flights that covered three to five mile areas. Over the duration of the study, the aircraft cataloged tens of thousands of images of ice and wildlife from altitudes of 300 feet to 1,000 feet.

Boulder Labs in Boulder, CO. developed an image recognition program that the project team used to process the captured images identifying seals in 27,000 pictures. From this point, researchers indicated seal types and ice types on which seals were found as well as calculated ice floes and their size and distribution.

The focus of the project is understanding the types of ice that seals need to survive so that other ice studies can be focused on particular types of ice. The current study focuses on four types of seals: bearded seals, ringed seals, spotted seals and ribbon seals. These seals are dependent on arctic ice for many aspects of their lives including breeding, sleeping and protection. Understanding the ice preferences of each seal breed allows researchers to study the particular types of ice and how they are holding up to climate change and by extension the long term effects that climate change will have on seal populations. The Arctic Ringed Seal is likely to be listed as a threatened species due to ice loss and snow melt in its habitat.

UAV flights are center-place to continued study of seals and ice, allowing researchers to collect more data enabling the most detailed study of seal populations and their Arctic habitat to date. These types of studies are perfect applications for UAVs highlighting the non-military potential of these aircraft.

For more information on unmanned aircraft systems training, check out our UAV/UAS Training Resource Center or find UAV/UAS training near you.

Source: UAVs are aiding the study of Arctic ice and seals
This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com.

Unmanned Aircraft Systems Revolutionizing Aerial Reconnaissance

Sunday, December 5th, 2010
Global Hawk

UAS like the Global Hawk and their cutting-edge sensors and cameras are revolutionizing intelligence gathering.

As the old adage goes, knowledge is power. From the early days of aviation, that adage has been applied in the form of aerial reconnaissance. As technology has improved, methods have progressed from a guy with a camera leaning out of a fabric biplane to unmanned aircraft sporting the latest in sensor technologies. With current military and civilian applications of unmanned aircraft systems rapidly expanding, a new industry is beginning to flourish.

The largest operator of unmanned aircraft, such as the Global Hawk, is the U.S. Military. Current engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan have put the aircraft to the ultimate test. By all indications, the aircraft have passed with flying colors. That’s no surprise when you consider that a UAS circling at more than 50,000 feet above the ground can take high-resolution pictures that allow you to distinguish between cars on the ground.

Even more amazing is the research and development work companies like Raytheon are performing to expand the capabilities of these aircraft. New technologies are being developed to allow these same aircraft to capture cell phone transmissions and locate the caller or detect nuclear and chemical labs. With so much available in one self-sufficient aircraft that can orbit an area nonstop for days, no wonder the military is buying more and more.

It’s not often that an industry develops and flourishes in lean years like the UAS industry, but given their ever-expanding applications, the industry will continue to boom for quite some time. Despite Pentagon budget cuts in areas like fighter jets and ships, the UAS industry is expected to expand from $3 billion in revenue to more than $6 billion within the decade.

In total, the military currently has more than 7,000 drones of various sizes deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Despite some high-profile cases of armed drones, most are primarily used for surveillance. The Global Hawk is the top of the food chain in the surveillance realm offering more than a days worth of endurance, the capability to operate at more than 60,000 feet above the surface, and a suite of the most advanced cameras and sensors ever developed.

The current fleet of UAS are generating so much data that the military isn’t equipped to process it all. According to Pentagon officials, UAS have generated so much video footage in the last year alone that it would take 24 years for single analyst to watch it all. A single UAS with the multiple cameras and other sensors generates enough data to perform unprecedented levels of reconnaissance, but without people to process the data, it doesn’t do much good. In short, the military and an ever-increasing number of civilian companies are looking to hire qualified operators and analysts to cope with the information and it looks like the jobs are here to stay.

For more information on unmanned aircraft systems training, check out our UAV/UAS Training Resource Center or find UAV/UAS training near you.

Source: The changing face of aerial reconnaissance
This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com.

KSU Establishes UAS Pilot Degree Program

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

The close relationship of KSU-Salina and the US Army allows access to state of the art equipment.

Kansas State University at Salina recently created a unmanned aircraft system pilot degree program. The program, which piggybacks off of existing research at the school, is one of only three in the US.

Military support and high-level aviation industry connections have contributed to the success of KSU-Salina’s unmanned aircraft research program. The program is responsible for a number of revolutionary developments in unmanned aircraft such as the “Wolverine” helicopter, which boasts nearly an hour of flight time. The aircraft is no longer than 3 feet and fully automated and, with nearly twice the flight time typical of this type of aircraft, looks to be quite successful.

The primary focus of many of the school’s aircraft has been disaster response. Their mobile command center and wide selection of unmanned aircraft, some with flight times approaching 30 hours, create a very innovative disaster relief organization that is equipped to produce their own aircraft and operators.

Perhaps the most crippling handicap of unmanned aircraft is their inability to practice see-and-avoid like traditional manned aircraft. KSU-Salina is currently researching in this area to create solutions that would allow their aircraft to sense and avoid obstructions or other aircraft automatically. If unmanned aircraft were given this capability, it would likely lead to widespread implementation as it strips away the biggest obstacle to integration into the national airspace system.

KSU-Salina’s proximity to Fort Riley has led to a very close relationship between the school and the US Army who operate UAS such as “Reapers” or even Black Hawk helicopters that can operate without pilots. While most military UAS are usually larger aircraft, the Army is also looking for smaller aircraft such as those developed by KSU-Salina that could be deployed by a convoy to detect IEDs.

The need for UAS pilots and military grants have allowed KSU-Salina to acquire state of the art technology and software to establish a degree program to create UAS pilots. The program, which is especially popular with enlisted personnel at Ft Riley, blends a UAS curriculum with traditional flight training curriculum. When students graduate, they are fully qualified to operate unmanned aircraft and, having also received private pilot certificates with instrument ratings, manned aircraft.

KSU-Salina’s program is an exciting addition to the UAS training offerings. Their strong research programs, relationships with the military and corporations, and their take on UAS pilot training will bring a much needed boost to this growing industry. With the continuation of their efforts, it won’t be long before UAS are successfully integrated into the national airspace system safely operating right beside manned aircraft.

For more information on unmanned aircraft systems training, check out our UAV/UAS Training Resource Center or find UAV/UAS training near you.

Sources: KSU-Salina unmanned program takes off
This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com.

Unmanned Aircraft Training: Army Preparing for Surge in Trainees

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

A US Army RQ-7 Shadow unmanned aircraft landing.

Unmanned aircraft are one of the fastest growing sectors in aviation. Their applications in the military are rapidly expanding day after day. Unmanned aircraft are being used in roles as diverse as close air support and climate data gathering. The demand is rapidly exceeding the supply of trained personnel to operate the aircraft.

The US Army is coping with their need via a single training base in Arizona. The base already sees hundreds of students daily and offers 20 programs of instruction on multiple unmanned aircraft systems. By 2012 the Army expects to deploy its first Gray Eagle company which means the base will see a serious increase in students beginning in the next few months.

Fort Huachuca, the Army’s unmanned aircraft training center, is ideal for the application thanks to the large restricted airspace surrounding the base. Roughly equivalent in size to Rhode Island, there is more than enough room for the enormous training efforts taking place on the base. The initial 21 week-long training programs can last as much as 16 hours a day. From there students are either deployed or they progress into more complex training programs which can last as much as 25 additional weeks. Like traditional flight training, the programs begin in the classroom before the trainees begin a rigorous simulator and flight training regimen.

The Army is heavily invested in cutting-edge simulator technologies thanks to the cost-savings realized in operating simulators versus actual aircraft. The goal is for students to realistically and safely train on the simulators and make a quick transition to real aircraft with little difficulty.

Source: Unmanned Aircraft Training Battalion Gears Up for Gray Eagle
This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com

FAA Slow Moving on ND Airspace for Unmanned Aircraft

Monday, September 20th, 2010
The military operates several models of unmanned aircraft overseas.

The military operates several models of unmanned aircraft overseas.

The Air Force has met resistance from the FAA in approving the restricted training airspace for unmanned aircraft operations in Grand Forks, ND. The Air Force, one of the largest operators of unmanned aircraft, is seeking a 35-mile by 45-mile area set aside for training crews of the Predator and the Global Hawk unmanned aircraft. According to Air Force officials, the next two years will see the primary mission at Grand Forks Air Base shift to operation of unmanned aircraft.

The military routinely operate unmanned aircraft in the same airspace as manned combat aircraft overseas, but FAA regulations require unmanned aircraft operations to receive a conditional waiver. These waivers are granted on a case by case basis. According to military officials, however, a waiver does not meet their need for dedicated training airspace. The demand for unmanned aircraft is growing faster than they can train crews and without dedicated training airspace, this is unlikely to improve.

The Pentagon and FAA have taken some flak during a field hearing in Grand Forks where Sen. Byron Dorgan questioned reporting time lines and the deployment of unmanned aircraft to a location where training cannot be performed. According to an FAA official, there are concerns about unmanned aircraft avoiding collisions with civilian aircraft. The FAA is seeking the support of groups in the civilian aviation industry before opening airspace to unmanned aircraft. The hope of this hearing is to expedite resolutions on the issue so that crew training can begin.

Sources:

Find unmanned aircraft training near you.

This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com

FAA Announces Two Year Agreement to Test Unmanned Aircraft Systems

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010
By Mathew Everett – Guest Blogger

A recent two year agreement between the FAA, Insitu Inc., and the New Jersey National Guard seeks to study the integration of unmanned aircraft systems in the national airspace system.

Insitu Inc. is a subsidiary of Boeing and will be providing two ScanEagle aircraft and related hardware.  Additionally, they will train FAA staff in piloting and maintaining these systems.  The New Jersey National Guard will play host to the flight testing program which will take place in their Warren Grove Range.

Currently UAS operate under special certificates of authorization that are determined on a case-by-case basis.  Most operations are segregated from other traffic as UAS are cleared to operate in restricted airspace.

The program, managed by the FAA’s William J. Hughes Technical Center, will focus on UAS design, construction, and functionality with special emphasis on differences in handling UAS and manned aircraft by an air traffic control.  With more than 1500 UAS currently in production and given their unique capabilities, it is important to develop guidelines for their safe integration into the national airspace system.

Learn more about UAV pilot training at AviationSchoolsOnline.com

Read the full FAA press release at http://www.faa.gov/news/fact_sheets/news_story.cfm?newsId=11479

UAV News – Predators on our Border… UAV’s Approved for Texas

Thursday, May 20th, 2010
By Kyle Garrett – AviationSchoolsOnline.com

The Federal Aviation Administration has approved the use of the first Predator UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) to patrol the U.S./Mexico border between Sierra Vista, AZ and Fort Huachuca, Texas, starting as soon as June 1, 2010. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security initially requested the use of UAVs and plans to bring another Predator online soon to patrol the remainder of the Texas border.

According to a May 15, 2010 article on the El Paso Times web site, the Predator UAV will “look for potential underground tunnels and the travel patterns of drug-trafficking organizations.” The article goes on to say that the Department of Homeland Security has been testing drones for border surveillance since June, 2004.

As UAV technology improves and the uses for UAVs expand, more and more UAV pilots and sensor operators will be needed. Expect to see more schools offering UAV training in the future.

UAV Training – University of North Dakota’s UAV Pilot Program

Monday, May 17th, 2010
By KyleGarrett – Aviation Schools Online

uav pilot trainingThe University of North Dakota is now promoting its UAV training program on AviationSchoolsOnline.com. The Bachelor’s degree program, the first of its kind in the U.S., prepares aspiring UAV pilots and sensor operators of the future for careers in this groundbreaking field.

According to the University of North Dakota (UND) website, “the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Operations degree from the University of North Dakota is being offered because of the increasing demand for qualified pilots and sensor operators in the rapidly growing field of unmanned aircraft systems operations.”

Visit UND’s web site for complete details on the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Operations degree.