DRONES HISTORY CLASSIFICATION AND USES

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Unmanned Vehicles March 22, 2014 Darien Mens Association.
Advertisements

UAV’s: Planes of the New Millennium
© HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Change and continuity How did World War Two differ from World War One?
Airmanship Knowledge Learning Outcome 3 Part 2 No 1 Group Air Combat Uncontrolled copy not subject to amendment Revision 1.00.
MILITARY AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS
The Special Challenges of Cruise Missile Proliferation Dennis M. Gormley Senior Fellow Monterey Institute’s Center for Nonproliferation Studies.
Drone Armament Nathan Krussel.
ODS3F –Observation and Detection Systems For Forest Fire Monitoring
USS INDEPENDENCE (LCS-2)
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Presentation. Customization for each client Each order is specifically designed to meet each clients’ aerial needs. On-board.
Gilbert Islas Feb. 25, 2012 SYSM  A micro air vehicle (MAV) is a class of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV). unmanned aerial vehicles  Size restrictions.
Drone (Pilotless) aircraft Daley Brathwaite. INTRODUCTION Drones or Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAV’s) are essentially aircraft that operate without the physical.
MILITARY AIR VEHICLE AS A SYSTEM György Seres DSc
C/3C Lucas Carlson UAV Systems. Development Mission Specifications EmploymentOverview 2.
AT 209 Introduction to Civil Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS)
Universal system-model of military air vehicle. Military air vehicle can be: –fighter, –bomber, –carrier, –exploratory, –helicopter, –UAV, –UCAV, –balloon,
BOOM!. How Technology Improved War Weaponry WWII saw rapid advancements in weaponry technology across all types of armaments Scientists, engineers and.
Background Link By Jason These are my questions. When was the first aircraft invented? How do stealth aircraft fly undetected? What will flight be like.
Autonomous Flight AIAA Group 6 Mat Thompson. Autonomy- The degree to which something is subject to control from the outside  Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.
MILITARY AIR VEHICLE, AS A SYSTEM György Seres DSc
Aerospace Engineering By Patrick Ferrell. Aerospace Engineering is the main branch of engineering concerned with the research, design, development, construction,
INDIAN FIGHTER PLANES BY Sayyam Gadhok.
Aircraft Recognition Lecture Leading Cadet Training Airmanship 2 5.
Introduction to Remotely Operated Vehicles ROVs
UAV Sojka. tactical unmanned aerial vehicle Range: km Flight speed: kmph Endurance: hours Ceiling:2,000 metres MTOW: 145 kg Payload:
Combat Support Air Operations
Military use of Drones! by, Scott Amack.
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles “Drones”
October 2006 NASA Dryden Status Aerospace Control & Guidance Sub-committee Williamsburg, VA October 2006 John Bosworth (661)
Autonomous Machines By: Tyler Roberts.
ES100 Engineering Design Project Micro Air Vehicle
The Altair Unmanned Aircraft System UAS By Hayley Stommel UAS By Hayley Stommel.
UAV LANDING SYSTEM Submitted by: SHAKTI SINGH SHEKHAWAT SHRISH KUMAR SHUKLA RISHI KUMAR YADAV VINEET AGRAWAL.
ES100 Engineering Design Project Micro Air Vehicle Group 1 Professor Kung.
University of Akron April 26-28, 2005 NASA Vehicle Systems Program Overview UAV Opportunities Conference Technology Review.
AVIATION HISTORY Lecture 9: Speeds of Flight. Mach Number  Speed of sound:  How fast the sound waves travel.  At sea level, 760 miles per hour (mph)
Tomahawk® Cruise Missiles
DRONE: UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE Seminar Co-Ordinator:  Mr. A.K.Singh Seminar Presented by: Ajit Pal Singh.
JLENS The Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System.
THE TYPES OF TRANSPORT npor. Ing. Zuzana Sudolská.
War in the Air Tiffany Morales, Erica Verga, Melissa Dominguez.
Aircraft Recognition Lecture Leading Cadet Training Airmanship 2 3.
Previous Slide TRADOC DCSINT Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command TRADOC DCSINT.
AVIATION HISTORY Lecture 9: Military Aviation. What is Military Aviation??  Military aviation is used to attack or defend a country through the sky.
UAS for Remote Sensing Myths and Realities 33rd International Symposium of Remote Sensing of the Environment Steve Wegener Bay Area Environmental Research.
Airmanship Knowledge for Air Cadets Learning Outcome 3 Know How to Identify Military Aircraft Part 3a: No2 Group Combat Support Uncontrolled copy not subject.
Unmanned Aerial Systems- (Drones) Presentation ROTARY CLUB OF LEXINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS USA.
Guruprasad Aphale. Sept. 10th, 2010 Guruprasad Aphale 1 Avionics Applications Comp -790
Jessica Prochut Unmanned Aerial Vehicles "Drones".
1. History of UAVs o 1849, Austria Attacks Venice o World War I o World War II 2.
AVIATION HISTORY Lecture 9: Military Aviation
Helping Agriculture One Flight at a Time
Washington Army National Guard
MAV 101. MAV 101 MAV 101 MAE 598 – Special Topics Micro Air Vehicles.
by Vladimir Petronijević
Intensive Production – Assessment 1
Phantom Eye Boeing UAV Brandon Witte.
Air Power Royal Air Force
Uncontrolled copy not subject to amendment
Are They Truly Beneficial.
Military Aircraft Systems
Introduction Dr. Alfred Lynam
Overview of UAS World.
Drone And Drone Delivery
Introduction History of UAS
The threat posed by drones to Europe’s armed forces
Unit 2 Unmanned Aircraft
EET 2530 Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
Artificial Intelligence in Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV)
Presentation transcript:

DRONES HISTORY CLASSIFICATION AND USES Raven Drones

HISTORY Pre-Aviation Days 1910s & 1920s Eddy's Surveillance Kite (USA, 1898) takes worlds first wartime aerial surveillance photos 1910s & 1920s Tesla describes unmanned aerial combat vehicles (1915) RAF Aerial Target (UK, 1916-17) designed for defense against Zeppelins, and as a flying bomb Sperry Aerial Torpedo (USA, 1916-18) incorporated A gyro-stabilizer, automatic steering gyroscope, a barometer, and an engine-revolution counter. RAE LARYNX (UK, 1925-27) engine produced 200Hhp; top speed 320kph faster than fighters of the time, armed with a 113 kg warhead.

HISTORY 1930s & 1940s Small advances but primarily remote controlled aircraft and the V1-V2 rockets which were more closely related to the modern cruise missiles 1950s & 1960s Drones primarily developed as targets for air to air and ground to air missile training and assessment AQM-34 Ryan Firebee (USA, 1960s) using anti-radar paint its radar signature was reduced. Between October of 1964 and April of 1975, over 1,000 of these drones flew in over 34,000 surveillance missions over SouthEast Asia, with an 83% recovery rate.

HISTORY 1970s & 1980s 1990s to Present Firebee 1241 (1970s, Israel) In 1970 Israel purchased 12 drones from the U.S., modified them, and re-designated them 'Firebee 1241'. These drones proved vital both as reconnaissance drones, and as decoys, a function not yet used much for drones. 1990s to Present General Atomics Aeronautical Systems RQ-1 Predator (USA, 1996) made into several variants including the Reaper [an armed UAV or more correctly a UCAV] Drones begin to be man-portable, the smallest of which is 4 inches and 16 grams.

CLASSIFICATION Classified by category Classified by range/altitude Target and decoy  Reconnaissance  Combat [UCAV] Logistics  Research and development  Civil and Commercial UAVs  Classified by range/altitude Hand-held 2,000 ft alt., about 2 km range Close 5,000 ft alt., up to 10 km range NATO type 10,000 ft alt., up to 50 km range Tactical 18,000 ft alt., about 160 km range MALE (medium altitude, long endurance) up to 30,000 ft alt. and range over 200 km HALE (high altitude, long endurance) over 30,000 ft alt. and indefinite range HYPERSONIC high-speed, supersonic (Mach 1–5) or hypersonic (Mach 5+) 50,000 ft or suborbital alt., range over 200 km ORBITAL low earth orbit (Mach 25+) CIS Lunar Earth-Moon transfer CACGS Computer Assisted Carrier Guidance System for UAVs Note : The United States military employs a tier system for categorizing its UAVs. The Tiers do not refer to specific models of aircraft but rather roles for which various models and their manufacturers competed.

USES Remote sensing Commercial aerial surveillance Domestic policing Oil, gas and mineral exploration and production Transport Scientific research Armed attacks Search and rescue Conservation Forest fire detection