Brigham Young University is testing new miniature surveillance aircraft for the Air Force. Designed for small unit tactical use, these flying scouts weigh in at about three ounces and further miniaturization is in the works.
According to one of the engineering professors involved,
"They could program it with a laptop or a PDA and give it a GPS location, or they may have a map on their laptop or PDA, and they may just select a point on the map and just say, 'Go there,' and then they will take the airplane out, throw it in the air and it would get there."
Future plans call for the ability to launch several at once and flying them in a coordinated manner for maximum coverage of an area.
A year or two ago I read about this concept, and the article likened it to a swarm of bees spreading out through city streets. I had no idea things had progressed this far. Further details (and pictures) can be found in this .pdf document from the BYU engineering department, titled "Unmanned Air Vehicle Testbed for Cooperative Control Experiments".
Posted by Ted at January 5, 2004 07:22 AM | TrackBackwow that is amazing...great post
Posted by: Darren Rowse at January 29, 2004 05:41 PM