Breaking news
Two Global Hawk RQ-4 unmanned aircraft perform closer autonomous aerial refueling 0610121.
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World
Aviation Industry News - Northrop Grumman |
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Two
Global Hawk RQ-4 unmanned aircraft perform closer autonomous aerial refueling.
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Northrop
Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC), the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA) and NASA Dryden Flight Research Center have successfully
completed a series of flight demonstrations, moving DARPA's Autonomous
High-Altitude Refueling (AHR) program closer to demonstrating the first
autonomous aerial refueling between two unmanned, high-altitude aircraft. |
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Video
Two Global Hawk RQ-4 Unmanned Aircraft Fly in Close Formation, Move AHR
Program Closer to Autonomous Aerial Refueling |
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The flights, which used two NASA Global Hawk unmanned aircraft – one configured as a tanker and the other as a receiver – were conducted at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. During the flights, which spanned Jan. 11 to May 30, the AHR team achieved many milestones, including: - The lead receiver
aircraft extended and retracted its aerial refueling hose several times,
completing all planned tests to validate the associated program hardware
and software. Northrop Grumman and NASA Dryden Flight Research Center conducted several demonstration flights in the buildup to the close formation flight, which included tanker and receiver first flights and a distant formation flight. The Northrop Grumman-NASA-DARPA team worked closely to ensure that all safety precautions and measures were taken when preparing for and conducting all of the ground and flight demonstrations. Preparation included a calculated approach to ground and flight tests, which included extensive analysis, simulations, laboratory and ground tests as well as multiple safety review boards. The $33 million DARPA AHR program aims to demonstrate autonomous fuel transfer between two Global Hawks, enabling flights of up to one week endurance. AHR is a follow-on to a 2006 DARPA Autonomous Aerial Refueling Demonstration (AARD), a joint effort with NASA Dryden that used an F/A-18 Hornet as a surrogate unmanned aircraft to autonomously refuel via a probe and drogue from a 707 tanker. As part of the U.S. Navy's Unmanned Combat Air System Carrier Demonstration program, Northrop Grumman is also developing AAR technology to help extend the operating range and flight duration of future carrier-based unmanned systems. The company plans to conduct AAR demonstrations in 2014 using the Navy's X-47B unmanned demonstrator aircraft. |
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