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Lighter-Than-Air (LTA) "AirStation": Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) Carrier ConceptProposals for adapting modern airship technologies for military missions have mostly focused on exploiting the airships high flight endurance and low fuel requirement to conduct direct surveillance missions requiring high degrees of persistence over the areas to be observed. While this mission has value, it constrains the airship in two regards. (1) It places all the surveillance sensors, communication systems, and other mission equipment in the airship itself. (2) It requires the airship to be physically in the vicinity of the areas to be directly observed. A more advanced utilization of airship technology would be to add the capability to deploy a separate set of surveillance equipment, thereby enabling indirect and distributed observation operations. This can be undertaken by installing surveillance equipment in a squadron of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) that can be carried and operated remotely from the airship, and then return to the airship as a base of support. This could be accomplished by deploying 20-30 UASs on an optionally manned (5 person crew) airship. The mission focus of the airship UAS carrier would be for support of distributed intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR), close air support (CAS), maritime patrol and interdiction, electronic warfare (EW), persistent area dominance and missile defense. The logic for utilizing an airship carrier over a ground base to deploy UAS will be examined. Whether to be used as a stand-alone platform or in concert with conventional intelligence gathering techniques, the airship UAS carrier can provide the following benefits: a mobile base that will remain accessible despite political fallout which may render a ground base unavailable for use, the psychological impact of a power projection tool that has no geographical limits (imagined in the same way a naval carrier group projects power), cost-saving intelligence gathering over manned alternatives (assumption), and a wider area of influence when compared to an immobile ground base that must facilitate the transfer of UAS to other bases in order to overfly particular areas (all operations, launch, recover, etc. take place from the airship).
Document ID
20180001627
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Hochstetler, Ron
(Science Applications International Corp. Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Chachad, Girish
(Science Applications International Corp. Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Blanken, Matthew
(Science Applications International Corp. Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Bosma, John
(ArcXeon International, LLC Washington, DC, United States)
Date Acquired
March 6, 2018
Publication Date
June 13, 2016
Subject Category
Aeronautics (General)
Systems Analysis And Operations Research
Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN32799-1
Meeting Information
Meeting: AIAA Aviation and Aeronautics Forum and Exposition
Location: Washington, DC
Country: United States
Start Date: June 13, 2016
End Date: June 17, 2016
Sponsors: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNA13AA07C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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