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Drones could soon refuel themselves mid-air

Last Updated : 04 May 2018, 08:02 IST
Last Updated : 04 May 2018, 08:02 IST

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Drones could soon handle mid-air refuelling by themselves, without the involvement of human pilots, US military flight tests have shown.

The findings raise the possibility of automated “flying gas stations” topping off robotic aircraft over future battlefields.

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) regularly uses unmanned drones to target militants in countries like Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen.

The US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) recently flew two modified RQ-4 Global Hawk drones in close proximity to simulate mid-air refuelling.

The Global Hawks, huge drones with 131-foot wingspans used for high-altitude surveillance, flew in formation with less than 100 feet separating the refuelling “probe” on one and refuelling “receiver” on the other during a two-and-a-half hour flight test.

“The goal of this demonstration was to create the expectation that future High Altitude Long Endurance aircraft will be refuelled in flight,” Jim McCormick, program manager at DARPA said.

“Such designs should be more affordable to own and operate across a range of mission profiles than systems built to satisfy the most stressing case without refuelling.

“The lessons from AHR certainly extend beyond the HALE flight regime, and insights into non-traditional tanker concepts may offer further operational advantages,” McCormick said in a statement. Neither Global Hawk drone needed human guidance during the final flight test at the high altitude of 44,800 feet.

The drones also maintained their tight formation despite turns and wind gusts of up to 37 Kph.

DARPA had kicked off its two-year Autonomous High-Altitude Refuelling (AHR) program with the expectation that just one out of six aerial refuelling attempts would prove successful.

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Published 07 October 2012, 15:59 IST

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