domingo, 30 de agosto de 2015

Military & Aerospace Electronics

Aurora Flight Sciences moves to 

next phase of DARPA aircraft

 automation project

aircraft automation







ARLINGTON, Va., 27 Aug. 2015. Avionics designers at Aurora Flight 
Sciences Corp. in Manassas, Va., are moving forward with a U.S
. defense research program to develop and insert new aircraft automation
 into existing planes and helicopters to enable operation with reduced 
onboard crew.
Officials of the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency 
(DARPA) in Arlington, Va., announced a $15.4 million contract modification
 to Aurora Flight Sciences on Wednesday to begin the second phase 
of the Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automation System (ALIAS) program.
Aurora Flight Sciences won an initial $6 million phase-one DARPA ALIAS
 contract in December 2014 to capitalize on advances in aircraft
 automation, such as optionally piloted aircraft and remotely piloted
] aircraft, to help reduce pilot workload, augment mission performance
, and improve aircraft safety.















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Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. in Stratford, Conn., won a $9.8 million contract 
modification last week for the second phase of the DARPA ALIAS program.
 Sikorsky engineers will conduct flight demonstrations of the Autonomous
 Crew Enhancement System (ACES) cargo-resupply mission on the
 UH-60L helicopter, as well as demonstrate the ACES system on a
 representative fixed-wing aircraft, DARPA officials say.
Lockheed Martin Corp. also is working on the first phase of the 
DARPA ALIAS program.
For ALIAS phase-one, Aurora worked with the National Robotics 
Engineering Center in Pittsburgh and the Duke Engineering Research
 Institute in Durham, N.C., to develop an automated assistant able
 to operate an aircraft from takeoff to landing.
The assistant automatically executes flight and mission activities, 
checklists, and procedures, while detecting and responding to
 contingencies, Aurora officials say. The system informs the human
pilot about actions the automated assistant is taking, and enables the
 human take back control when necessary.
In the second phase of ALIAS, Aurora engineers will focus on refining
 the overall ALIAS system, reducing risks, demonstrating rapid installation
 time, and conducting additional in-flight demonstrations.
In DARPA ALIAS phase-two, Aurora experts also will refine subsystems 
and demonstrate the overall system on a third aircraft, a 
Sikorsky UH-60 military helicopter.
The objectives of ALIAS phase two are to enhance and mature
 the phase-one system to support flight tests, enhance the usability
 and robustness of the human interface, and demonstrate system
 portability on the ground.
On this contract modification Aurora Flight Sciences will do the work in
 Manassas, Va.; Pittsburgh; and Durham, N.C., and should be finished
 by December 2016. For more information contact Aurora Flight
 Sciences Aircraft online at www.aurora.aero, or DARPA at www.darpa.mil.

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