The
series of about 20 flights used the company's Patroller drone, and took
place near Toulouse from October 26 to November 7. It was carried out
within the scope of Europe's SESAR program. Sagem is teaming up with the
French air navigation and safety agency DSNA (Direction de la Sécurité
de la Navigation Aérienne), the laboratory run by the national
civil aviation school ENAC (Ecole Nationale d’Aviation Civile) and
Rockwell Collins France through the ODREA project (1).
Sagem demonstrated a complete anti-collision function during these flights,
one of the keys to integrating drones in a civilian airspace shared with
manned aircraft.
The "see and avoid" system developed by Sagem and integrated
in the Patroller's control system, combines traffic detection sensors,
including an infrared optronic (electro-optical) sensor, and an automatic
risk collision estimation and avoidance flightpath generation module.
During the flight tests, this system was successfully operated using different
conflict scenarios with a "dummy" aircraft provided by ENAC,
thus enabling Patroller to detect the risk of a collision and avoid it,
without requiring an operator.
The ODREA project also demonstrated Patroller's ability to carry out approaches
to the Toulouse-Blagnac airport according to procedures defined by air
traffic control (ATC). This demonstration confirms that a drone is capable
of operating in the terminal zone of an international airport, without
impacting traffic or safety.
The series of demonstration flights, a real first in Europe, followed
a major simulation validation project by the ODREA consortium. It marks
a major step forward in demonstrating the state-of-the-art technological
solutions for integrating drones in civilian, non-segregated airspace.
Developed in France by Sagem, the Patroller is a 1-ton class tactical
drone system carrying multiple sensors. Because of its modular design
it can carry a payload of up to 350 kg, in the fuselage or in pods (optronics,
radar and electronic warfare), and offers 20-hour endurance with a ceiling
of 20,000 ft.
Sagem deploys the full range of expertise needed to develop and build
modern drone systems: day/night gyrostabilized very-high-precision optronic
assemblies, real-time data transmission, inertial navigation and flight
control, ground segments, mission planning and playback, systems integration
and interoperability with the joint services, allied digital battlespace.
|