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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
171

Airborne armed full motion video the nexus of OPS/INTEL integration in the joint/coalition environment /

Cooter, Mark A. January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Joint Campaign Planning and Strategy)--Joint Forces Staff College, Joint Advanced Warfighting School, 2007. / Title from title screen; viewed on July 9, 2007. "April 2007." Electronic version of original print document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 61-66).
172

Development of a seamless morphing wing

Petersen, Michael January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Mechanical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2010. / The Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) Advanced Manufacturing and Technology Laboratory (AMTL) developed an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Technology Demonstrator for the purpose of testing and maturing adaptronic devices. Extending the flight envelope of this unmanned aerial vehicle by increasing its range and endurance is the next step in its development. A seamless variable angle of incidence (sVAI) morphing wing is proposed to increase the lift with little coupling to drag during takeoff; and decrease the drag with little effect on lift during climb, thus increasing the total flight performance of the aircraft. CAD models of the conceptualized sVAI wing and a conventional (CON) wing, as used on the Technology Demonstrator, were modeled. Numerical analyses on these CAD models showed that the sVAI wing concept at a 4° twist decreased the ground roll distance and stall velocity by ±17% and ±31% respectively, as compared to the CON wing in standard takeoff configuration. This allowed for ± 11.7% less power required for takeoff allowing the aircraft to get to its operational altitude quicker, thus saving fuel and reducing energy losses; and increasing range and endurance. The results also showed that the sVAI wing concept could reduce the drag during climb by ± 14%, but the lift is also proportionately reduced thus having little improvement on the climb phase of flight performance. A prototype of the morphing wing was then conceptualized and designed, using a 3D CADmodeler, and then manufactured. The product development chain produced for this morphing wing included two rapid prototyping machines and reverse engineering technologies. The chain allowed for the rapid manufacturing of light weight and intricate parts. The manufactured wing is then incorporated into a test rig to compare the actual morphing ability of the prototype to the theoretical morphing ability of the CADmodel, and thus make flight performance predictions of the actual vehicle. 3D scans were taken of the prototype and then converted to 3D CADfiles. The geometrical and topographical deformation of the prototype was then compared to that of the CAD model showing an average difference of ±1.2% and ±3% at maximum positive and negative configurations, respectively. This allowed one to make the prediction that the sVAI wing will increase the performance of the Technology Demonstrator.
173

Development and stabilization of an unmanned vertical takeoff and landing technology demonstrator platform

Onochie, Cyprian Ogonna January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Mechanical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2017. / Small and micro unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) are rapidly becoming viable platforms for surveillance, aerial photography, firefighting and even package delivery. While these UAVs that are of the rotorcraft type require little to no extra infrastructure for their deployment, they are typically saddled with short ranges and endurance, thus placing a restriction on their usage. On the other hand, UAVs that are of fixed wing type generally have longer range and endurance but often require a runway for take-off and landing which places a restriction on their usage. This project focuses on the development of a vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) UAV demonstrator suitable for integration on a small or mini flying wing UAV (a fixed wing UAV) to counteract the take-off and landing limitations of fixed wing type UAVs. This thesis first presents a propulsion characterisation experiment designed to determine the thrust and moment properties of a select set of propulsion system components. The results of the characterisation experiment identified that the propulsion set of a Turnigy C6374 – 200 brushless out runner electric motor driving a 22 x 10 inch three bladed propeller will provide approximately 79N (8kg) of thrust at 80% throttle (4250rpm). Therefore, two of these propulsion set would satisfy the platform requirement of 12kg maximum take-off mass (MTOM). The result of the abovementioned experiment, together with the VTOL platform requirements were then used as considerations for the selection of the suitable VTOL method and consequently the design of the propulsion configuration. Following a comparison of VTOL methods, the tilt-rotor is identified as the most suitable VTOL method and a variable speed twin prop concept as the optimal propulsion configuration.
174

Optimisation of electric long endurance unmanned aerial vehicles

Fourie, Dehann 06 June 2012 (has links)
M.Ing. / Sustained or long endurance solar powered flight is defined as an aircraft capable of main- taining flight through multiple day-night flight cycles, using only solar power and rechargable energy stores. The project is focused on developing solar powered flight theory and real-world unmanned aerial vehicle implementations. The important aspects of system design are es- tablished and studied at a fundamental theoretical level. A preliminary design is conducted with endurance optimisation as the main aim. The optimisation process aims to establish a theoretical basis for sustained solar powered flight. The project is started with a feasibility and relevance study. A literature study was used to gather the required theoretical information. A novel theoretical preliminary design basis is conducted. The study is aimed at answering many questions in the field. The study is the first to show how previously varied aircraft from 3 m to 80 m are valid solutions to the long endurance flight requirement. The optimisation results correlates well with the current state-of-the-art. The theoretical models were then characterised through the development of two unmanned aerial vehicles. The development required a multidisciplinary integration of various fields. The development process was characterised and discussed. Flight automation was successfully integrated into the system. Multiple test flights were conducted. An interpretation of multi- faceted results are given. This project has contributed to international theory regarding solar powered and sustained endurance aircraft. Many specific contributions were made to the field. The project has achieved multiple unofficial records from the flight tests in the Southern Hemisphere and African continent.
175

Design and Evaluation of a Fixed-Pitch Multirotor UAV with a Nonlinear Control Strategy

Kroeger, Kenneth Edward 28 May 2013 (has links)
The use and practical applications of small UAV systems has continually grown in the past several years in both the public and private sectors. These UAV systems are used for not only defensive purposes, but for commercial applications such as exterior bridge and home inspections, wildlife/wildfire management and observation, conservation exercises, law-enforcement, radio-repeating operations, and a wide variety of other uses that may not warrant the use, expense, space constraints, or risk of a manned aircraft. This thesis focuses on the design of a fixed pitch multirotor UAV system for use in furthering research projects and facilitating payload data collection from a flying platform without the expense or risk of testing with available larger UAV systems. The design of a multirotor UAV system with a flight control scheme, communication architecture and hardware, electrical architecture and hardware, and mechanical design is presented. An Extended Kalman Filter (EKF) strategy is implemented aboard a developed Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) to estimate vehicle state. Experiments then validated the estimates from the EKF through a comparative approach between the developed unit and a commercial unit. A nonlinear flight control system is implemented based on an Integral-Backstepping control strategy. The flight control strategy was then fully simulated and exhaustively tested under a variety of external disturbances and initial conditions from a fully dynamic modeled environment. Parameters about the vehicle were experimentally determined to increase the accuracy of the model which would increase the chances of successful flight operations. Flight demonstrations were conducted to evaluate the abilities and performance of the control system, along with testing the interface abilities and reliability between a universal ground control station (UGCS) and the aircraft. Lastly, the model was revisited with the input data from the flight control experiment and the output captured was evaluated against the output of the model system to evaluate effectiveness, reliability, and accuracy of the model. The results of the comparison showed that the computer simulation was accurate in predicting attitude and altitude of the vehicle to that of the realized system. / Master of Science
176

A*-Based Path Planning for an Unmanned Aerial and Ground Vehicle Team in a Radio Repeating Operation

Krawiec, Bryan Michael 30 May 2012 (has links)
In the event of a disaster, first responders must rapidly gain situational awareness about the environment in order to plan effective response operations. Unmanned ground vehicles are well suited for this task but often require a strong communication link to a remote ground station to effectively relay information. When considering an obstacle-rich environment, non-line-of-sight conditions and naive navigation strategies can cause substantial degradations in radio link quality. Therefore, this thesis incorporates an unmanned aerial vehicle as a radio repeating node and presents a path planning strategy to cooperatively navigate the vehicle team so that radio link health is maintained. This navigation technique is formulated as an A*-based search and this thesis presents the formulation of this path planner as well as an investigation into strategies that provide computational efficiency to the search process. The path planner uses predictions of radio signal health at different vehicle configurations to effectively navigate the vehicles and simulations have shown that the path planner produces favorable results in comparison to several conceivable naive radio repeating variants. The results also show that the radio repeating path planner has outperformed the naive variants in both simulated environments and in field testing where a Yamaha RMAX unmanned helicopter and a ground vehicle were used as the vehicle team. Since A* is a general search process, this thesis also presents a roadway detection algorithm using A* and edge detection image processing techniques. This algorithm can supplement unmanned vehicle operations and has shown favorable performance for images with well-defined roadways. / Master of Science
177

The UAV and the current and future regulatory construct for integration into the national airspace system /

Peterson, Mark Edward. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
178

New Container Architectures for Mobile, Drone, and Cloud Computing

Van't Hof, Alexander Edward January 2023 (has links)
Containers are increasingly used across many different types of computing to isolate and control apps while efficiently sharing computing resources. By using lightweight operating system virtualization, they can provide apps with a virtual computing abstraction while imposing minimal hardware requirements and a small footprint. My thesis is that new container architectures can provide additional functionality, better resource utilization, and stronger security for mobile, drone, and cloud computing. To demonstrate this, we introduce three new container architectures that enable new mobile app migration functionality, a new notion of virtual drones and efficient utilization of drone hardware, and stronger security for cloud computing by protecting containers against untrusted operating systems. First, we introduce Flux to support multi-surface apps, apps that seamlessly run across multiple user devices, through app migration. Flux introduces two key mechanisms to overcome device heterogeneity and residual dependencies associated with app migration to enable app migration. Selective Record/Adaptive Replay to record just those device-agnostic app calls that lead to the generation of app-specific device-dependent state in services and replay them on the target. Checkpoint/Restore in Android (CRIA) to transition an app into a state in which device-specific information the app contains can be safely discarded before checkpointing and restoring the app within a containerized environment on the new device. Second, we introduce AnDrone, a drone-as-a-service solution that makes drones accessible in the cloud. AnDrone provides a drone virtualization architecture to leverage the fact that computational costs are cheap compared to the operational and energy costs of putting a drone in the air. This enables multiple virtual drones to run simultaneously on the same physical drone at very little additional cost. To enable multiple virtual drones to run in an isolated and secure manner, each virtual drone runs its own containerized operating system instance. AnDrone introduces a new device container architecture, providing virtual drones with secure access to a full range of drone hardware devices, including sensors such as cameras and geofenced flight control. Finally, we introduce BlackBox, a new container architecture that provides fine-grain protection of application data confidentiality and integrity without the need to trust the operating system. BlackBox introduces a container security monitor, a small trusted computing base that creates separate and independent physical address spaces for each container, such that there is no direct information flow from container to operating system or other container physical address spaces. Containerized apps do not need to be modified, can still make full use of operating system services via system calls, yet their CPU and memory state are isolated and protected from other containers and the operating system.
179

Instrumentation and Control of a Ducted Fan Unmanned Aerial Vehicle in Hover Mode

Straub, Benjamin Preston 06 September 2016 (has links)
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are increasingly being used for both military and commercial applications to replace more costly and dangerous manned operations. Vehicles with vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) and hovering capabilities are of interest for functions such as surveillance and inspection where the ability to hold the position of the vehicle is desired. Ducted fan vehicles are of particular interest because of their high efficiency per unit diameter when compared to the more commonly seen multirotor vehicles. This makes ducted fan UAVs very well suited for size-constrained missions such as indoor inspection or urban reconnaissance. However, the advantages of ducted fans come at the cost of complex nonlinear dynamics which present challenging modeling and control problems. This thesis provides a detailed discussion of the instrumentation, modeling, and control of a ducted fan UAV. The dynamic model of the UAV is computed from a simplified parametric model. Unknown parameters of the model are found from system identification based on flight data. Synthesis of a linear state feedback controller based on this model is discussed, and it is demonstrated in hardware that this controller can effectively stabilize the vehicle. / Master of Science
180

Target Locating in Unknown Environments Using Distributed Autonomous Coordination of Aerial Vehicles

Mohr, Hannah Dornath 14 May 2019 (has links)
The use of autonomous aerial vehicles (UAVs) to explore unknown environments is a growing field of research; of particular interest is locating a target that emits a signal within an unknown environment. Several physical processes produce scalar signals that attenuate with distance from their source, such as chemical, biological, electromagnetic, thermal, and radar signals. The natural decay of the signal with increasing distance enables a gradient ascent method to be used to navigate toward the target. The UAVs navigate around obstacles whose positions are initially unknown; a hybrid controller comprised of overlapping control modes enables robust obstacle avoidance in the presence of exogenous inputs by precluding topological obstructions. Limitations of a distributed gradient augmentation approach to obstacle avoidance are discussed, and an alternative algorithm is presented which retains the robustness of the hybrid control while leveraging local obstacle position information to improve non-collision reliability. A heterogeneous swarm of multirotors demonstrates the target locating problem, sharing information over a multicast wireless private network in a fully distributed manner to form an estimate of the signal's gradient, informing the direction of travel toward the target. The UAVs navigate around obstacles, showcasing both algorithms developed for obstacle avoidance. Each UAV performs its own target seeking and obstacle avoidance calculations in a distributed architecture, receiving position data from an OptiTrack motion capture system, illustrating the applicability of the control law to real world challenges (e.g., unsynchronized clocks among different UAVs, limited computational power, and communication latency). Experimental and theoretical results are compared. / Master of Science / In this project, a new method for locating a target using a swarm of unmanned drones in an unknown environment is developed and demonstrated. The drones measure a signal such as a beacon that is being emitted by the target of interest, sharing their measurement information with the other drones in the swarm. The magnitude of the signal increases as the drones move toward the target, allowing the drones to estimate the direction to the target by comparing their measurements with the measurements collected by other drones. While seeking the target in this manner, the drones detect obstacles that they need to avoid. An issue that arises in obstacle avoidance is that drones can get stuck in front of an obstacle if they are unable to decide which direction to travel; in this work, the decision process is managed by combining two control modes that correspond to the two direction options available, using a robust switching algorithm to select which mode to use for each obstacle. This work extends the approach used in literature to include multiple obstacles and allow obstacles to be detected dynamically, enabling the drones to navigate through an unknown environment as they locate the target. The algorithms are demonstrated on unmanned drones in the VT SpaceDrones test facility, illustrating the capabilities and effectiveness of the methods presented in a series of scenarios.

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