The U.S. Army installed its first Ground-Based Sense-and-Avoid radar
system today, here, which is home to two MQ-1C Gray Eagle unmanned
aircraft system companies
Fort Hood is one of five installations that have been identified to acquire the system.
"We are very excited to finally see this come to fruition," said Viva
Kelley, product director for U.S. Army Unmanned Aircraft Systems
Airspace Integration Concepts. "The whole team has been working very
hard on this program since its inception. In the end, it will provide
the Army with a safer and more effective way with which to conduct UAS
(unmanned aircraft systems) training and testing."
Currently, the Army uses visual observers, on the ground or in a chase
plane, to provide the necessary "see-and-avoid" function required by
federal regulation (14 CFR 91.113). The Army-developed Ground-Based
Sense-and-Avoid, or GBSAA, will initially support UAS transiting from
airfields to restricted areas where training and testing can occur.
The radar system consists of numerous complex subsystems, including
multiple 3-D radar, known as LSTAR, data fusion, tracker, classifier,
separation algorithms, displays and much more, that have been designed
and developed for the sole function of sense and avoid.
Without a pilot on board, UAS do not have the ability to safely navigate
in airspace with other traffic, officials said, adding especially with
aircraft that are not transponding or otherwise cooperating in the
airspace system.
The GBSAA system was designed to be compatible with any UAS, in any
airspace and under any operational need. The goal is to open up
necessary airspace to UAS and allow them to fly as safely as manned
aircraft can. While the first steps will be transits from airfields to
restricted areas, operations in military operating areas are in the very
near future.
"The GBSAA system has exceeded all of its performance requirements, from
the test bed to the full system concept demonstrations and follow-on
testing," said Col. Courtney Cote, project manager for UAS. "This system
provides the alternate means of compliance with FAA regulatory
requirements that will enable our Army to perform the critical mission
training they need."
Fort Hood is the first site to receive the system and will have hardware
installed in mid-December. The hardware will continue to collect data
for a safety analysis and report before becoming fully operational, in
2015. Collecting and analyzing the data will allow operators to see and
verify if the radar is seeing everything and give the safety team a good
understanding of the airspace traffic.
http://www.army.mil/article/140078/Army_installs_first_Ground_Based_Sense_and_Avoid_radar/
By PEO Avaiation
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