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'Urban soaring' UAV to take flight

RMIT University researchers in Melbourne, Australia, are aiming to be the first in the world to demonstrate an autonomous unmanned aircraft that can mimic birds by using updrafts around buildings to stay airborne.

The project to develop a bio-inspired unmanned aircraft is being carried out with Australia’s Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO).

Lead researcher Dr Reece Clothier said soaring birds use positive air flows generated around features such as cliffs or large buildings to maintain lift.


‘This research aims to develop the sensing and control systems that will allow a small fixed-wing unmanned aircraft to achieve the same thing,’ Dr Clothier said in a statement. ‘Birds make soaring look easy, but when we try to mimic what they know by instinct, we realise just how far advanced nature is in its designs.’

The focus is on proving the feasibility of “urban” soaring, combining real-time sensing of wind with complex flow models to locate possible positive airflows around large buildings. Flying a small aircraft in those updrafts could significantly increase its endurance.

Dr Jennifer Palmer, a senior research scientist in the Aerospace Division of DSTO, said the long-term goal was to design an unmanned aircraft that could autonomously predict airflows in its surrounding environment and – by using this information - minimise its energy consumption, maximise its endurance and avoid areas of high turbulence.

‘Small aircraft used for communications relay or surveillance and reconnaissance could greatly benefit by having a means of exploiting naturally occurring updrafts and avoiding the deleterious effects of turbulence in urban environments,’ said Dr Palmer.

 The project is being supported by Australia’s Defence Science Institute.