Dec. 27, 2007 -- For the first time, scientists have engineered an unmanned seaplane that can take off and land, independently, on water. The Flying Fish autonomous vehicle, like its namesake, dwells mostly in the water. When the time comes, it takes off and flies over the waves at distances of tens to thousands of feet. Equipped with GPS and eventually energy-harvesting solar cells, the UAV has the potential to expand the kinds of water-monitoring tasks currently limited by the expense of a ship or by the stationary nature of water buoys. For example, a fleet of the autonomous crafts could be sprinkled across an ocean region, each gathering data in its own designated circle. When a plane reaches the edge of its circle, it could take off, fly to the opposite side of the monitoring area, land, and begin taking measurements again. "They live in the water. They don't need a structure to be launched from or landed on and that makes them more independent," said team member Ella Atkins, associate professor of aerospace engineering and associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Michigan. The project is led by Guy Meadows, director of the university's Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratories and funded by the Department of Defense's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency as part of its "persistent ocean surveillance" program, which will result in a floating field of smart sensors designed to observe the undersea environment. In a recent sea trial demonstration, the 20-pound craft used GPS and an onboard computer to take off and land in the water 22 times. Although the seaplane's electric engine currently gets it power from a battery, the team hopes to add alternative energy harvesting equipment, such as solar panels. That could make the UAV "drop and go." "If you can only deploy it for a few hours, you need ship there anywhere. Solar power is the key to being able to drive your ship away," said Atkins. And that can save money. According to Hanumant Singh, an associate scientist who specializes in underwater imaging and robotics at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Woods Hole, Mass., a ship can cost $35,000 a day. See a Hurricane Simulator in Action |
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