1. The Future of Battlefield Micro Air Vehicle Systems S.D. Prior, S-T. Shen, M. Karamanoglu, S. Odedra, M. Erbil, C. Barlow and D. Lewis 18 December 200 9
2. The MOUT Environment Conducting Military Operations on Urban Terrain (MOUT) is clearly more dangerous than operating in open terrain, and therefore requires greater situational awareness if casualties are to be reduced.
4. The IED Problem IED fatalities in Afghanistan (2001-09) (http://www.icasualties.org/OEF/index.aspx ) By far the greatest problem to date for coalition forces has been the use of Improvised Explosive Devices (IED’s). 61% of all deaths
6. The Terrorist Threat The terrorist’s strength lies in their urban concealment and timing of an attack. The re exists an opportunity to develop low-cost, novel systems which can be speedily deployed to these theatres to combat the main threats of IED’s, Snipers, ‘Technicals’ and Armed Terrorists.
7. Military Spending on Robotics The MoD have recently awarded Remotec UK Ltd a £64m contract to supply them with 80 CUTLASS units, which are to be used for Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD). iRobot have a contract to supply the U.S Army with a large number of advanced Small Unmanned Ground Vehicles (SUGV), which has recently grown to $ 286 m. The United States Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) are spending $ 34 0bn on the new Future Combat System (FCS) program which started in 2005. The program ha s now changed into a new modernising initiative to give them a technological advantage in the field.
8. Military Spending on Robotics In August 2005, Thales UK was awarded the Watchkeeper WK450 contract worth £800m for the Development and Manufacture of an all weather Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) used for reconnaissance which is due in service in 2010 . In Feb 2009, the UK MoD bought six T-Hawk systems (12 MAVs) from Honeywell worth a reputed US$5.7m . The US Navy have already placed orders for 372 of these.
9. The Use of UAVs R&D (<10%) Civil/Commercial (150) (13%) Dual Purpose (260) (22%) Military (683) (57%) Source: UAS Yearbook – UAS: The Global Perspective (2009-10)
10. UAV Producing Countries UK (65) (5%) France (77) (7%) Israel (83) (7%) US (386) (32%) Source: UAS Yearbook – UAS: The Global Perspective (2009-10)
11. UAV Design Possibilities What we have Now. What Nature Intended. Latest Advance in Tactical MAVs. Niche SF Delivery System. Static Surveillance. VTOL/Hover & Stare Capability. Source: UAS Yearbook – UAS: The Global Perspective (2009-10) Fixed Wing 72% Rotary Wing 17% Lighter-than Air 3% Ducted Fan 3% Ornithopter <1% Motorized Parachute <1% Micro Air Vehicles
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13. VTOL Design Specification Typical Small VTOL MAV Specification Criteria Value Criteria Value MTOW 1 - 5 kg EO Payload 0.2 – 1.5 kg Manoeuvrability 3 Dof - (x or y) , z, r z Speed 0 – 10 m/s (H) 0 – 5 m/s (V) Max Operational Size 0.7 x 0.7 x 0.2 m Set-up time < 5 min Endurance 30 - 60 min Concealment < 60 db @ 1 m Survivability Weather, collision Cost £ 10- 30 k
22. International Journal of MAVs International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles Editor-in-Chief: Dr. Mark Reeder published quarterly • ISSN 1756-8293 • 2010 journal prices/format options 2010 is volume 2