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Boeing
Flight-Tests 2-Pound Imaging Radar Aboard ScanEagle Unmanned
Aircraft
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
NanoSAR,
the world's smallest synthetic aperture radar, is shown
aboard a ScanEagle unmanned aircraft (UA). The 2-pound
radar, approximately the size of a shoebox, was successfully
flight-tested by Boeing aboard ScanEagle on Jan. 7. Data
collection onboard ScanEagle worked as planned, and SAR
imagery was later created on the ground. The next step in
flight testing will be to create imagery aboard the UA in
real time.
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Credit:
The Boeing Company
The Boeing Company [NYSE:
BA], in partnership with ImSAR and Insitu Inc., has successfully
flight-tested NanoSAR, the world's smallest Synthetic Aperture
Radar (SAR), aboard the ScanEagle unmanned aircraft (UA).
During the 1.5-hour flight on
Jan. 7 at the Boardman, Ore. test range, ScanEagle, with ImSAR's
NanoSAR payload installed, completed several passes over the
target area at various altitudes and ranges. The targets included
vehicles, structures and corner reflectors. Data collection
onboard the ScanEagle worked as planned, and SAR imagery was
later created on the ground. The next step in flight testing will
be to create imagery aboard the UA in real time.
The NanoSAR is a 2-pound system
approximately the size of a shoebox. The weight of standard SARs
ranges from 50 to 200 pounds.
"In the past, the
advantages of SARs' all-weather imaging capabilities have been
the exclusive domain of only larger unmanned aircraft. Now, even
the 40-pound ScanEagle can carry both an electro-optical or
infrared camera and a SAR payload at the same time," said
Carol Wilke, ScanEagle chief engineer for Boeing. "SAR is
now at the lower end of payload weight budgets instead of at the
top.
"The NanoSAR technology's
ability to see in hazy, cloudy, rainy or foggy conditions is
ideally suited for the maritime environment," Wilke added.
"Combined with ScanEagle's long-endurance capability,
NanoSAR offers a cost-effective solution for customers'
surveillance requirements."
Logan Harris, chief technology
officer for ImSAR, said, "SAR is the best tool to get
certain jobs done, such as finding small vessels on the ocean.
But because of the size, weight, power and cost of SAR systems,
it just hasn't been possible to get this capability to the
warfighter on a broader scale. NanoSAR has changed that. The
NanoSAR is built on Printed Circuit Board technology that is
rugged and can be rapidly and cost-effectively manufactured."
Since 2004, the ScanEagle
system has proven on a daily basis that it is the best-value
solution to support warfighters in the field around the world. It
has logged more than 70,000 combat flight hours with the U.S
Marines Expeditionary Force, the U.S. Navy and the Australia
Defense Force in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Navy has logged more
than 900 shipboard recoveries using ScanEagle.
ScanEagle, a joint effort of
Boeing Advanced Systems' Advanced Precision Engagement and
Mobility Systems and Insitu, was developed as a low-cost,
long-endurance autonomous unmanned aircraft to provide persistent
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance as well as
flexible, rapid deployment for a variety of government and
civilian applications.
A ScanEagle UA carries
inertially stabilized electro-optical and infrared cameras. The
gimbaled cameras allow the operator to easily track both
stationary and moving targets. Capable of flying above 16,000
feet and loitering over the battlefield for more than 24 hours,
the platform provides persistent low-altitude reconnaissance.
ScanEagle is launched
autonomously via a pneumatic SuperWedge™ catapult launcher
and flies pre-programmed or operator-initiated missions. An
Insitu-patented SkyHook™ system is used for retrieval --
the aircraft catches a rope suspended from a 50-foot-high tower.
The patented system makes the ScanEagle system
runway-independent, with a small footprint similar to that needed
for vertical takeoff and landing vehicles.
Source:
The Boeing Company

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