Перейти на страницу файла на Викискладе

Файл:DAST Mated to B-52 in Flight - Close-up from Below DVIDS713670.jpg

Материал из Википедии — свободной энциклопедии
Перейти к навигации Перейти к поиску

Исходный файл(3000 × 2347 пкс, размер файла: 5,47 МБ, MIME-тип: image/jpeg)

Краткое описание

Описание
English: This photo shows a BQM-34 Firebee II drone being carried aloft under the wing of NASA’s B-52 mothership during a 1977 research flight. The Firebee/DAST research program ran from 1977 to 1983 at the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California.

This is the original Firebee II wing. Firebee 72-1564 made three captive flights--on November 25, 1975; May 17, 1976; and June 22, 1977--in preparation for the DAST project with modified wings. These were for checkout of the Firebee's systems and the prelaunch procedures. The first two used a DC-130A aircraft as the launch vehicle, while the third used the B-52. A single free flight using this drone occurred on July 28, 1977. The remote (ground) pilot was NASA research pilot Bill Dana. The launch and flight were successful, and the drone was caught in midair by an HH-53 helicopter.

From 1977 to 1983, the Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, (under two different names) conducted the DAST Program as a high-risk flight experiment using a ground-controlled, pilotless aircraft. Described by NASA engineers as a "wind tunnel in the sky," the DAST was a specially modified Teledyne-Ryan BQM-34E/F Firebee II supersonic target drone that was flown to validate theoretical predictions under actual flight conditions in a joint project with the Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia.

The DAST Program merged advances in electronic remote control systems with advances in airplane design. Drones (remotely controlled, missile-like vehicles initially developed to serve as gunnery targets) had been deployed successfully during the Vietnamese conflict as reconnaissance aircraft. After the war, the energy crisis of the 1970s led NASA to seek new ways to cut fuel use and improve airplane efficiency. The DAST Program's drones provided an economical, fuel-conscious method for conducting in-flight experiments from a remote ground site. DAST explored the technology required to build wing structures with less than normal stiffness. This was done because stiffness requires structural weight but ensures freedom from flutter-an uncontrolled, divergent oscillation of the structure, driven by aerodynamic forces and resulting in structural failure. The program used refined theoretical tools to predict at what speed flutter would occur. It then designed a high-response control system to counteract the motion and permit a much lighter wing structure. The wing had, in effect, "electronic stiffness."

Flight research with this concept was extremely hazardous because an error in either the flutter prediction or control system implementation would result in wing structural failure and the loss of the vehicle. Because of this, flight demonstration of a sub-scale vehicle made sense from the standpoint of both safety and cost. The program anticipated structural failure during the course of the flight research.

The Firebee II was a supersonic drone selected as the DAST testbed because its wing could be easily replaced, it used only tail-mounted control surfaces, and it was available as surplus from the U. S. Air Force. It was capable of 5-g turns (that is, turns producing acceleration equal to 5 times that of gravity). Langley outfitted a drone with an aeroelastic, supercritical research wing suitable for a Mach 0.98 cruise transport with a predicted flutter speed of Mach 0.95 at an altitude of 25,000 feet.

Dryden and Langley, in conjunction with Boeing, designed and fabricated a digital flutter suppression system (FSS). Dryden developed an RPRV (remotely piloted research vehicle) flight control system; integrated the wing, FSS, and vehicle systems; and conducted the flight program. In addition to a digital flight control system and aeroelastic wings, each DAST drone had research equipment mounted in its nose and a mid-air retrieval system in its tail. The drones were originally launched from the NASA B-52 bomber and later from a DC-130. The DAST vehicle's flight was monitored from the sky by an F-104 chase plane.

When the DAST's mission ended, it deployed a parachute and then a specially equipped Air Force helicopter recovered the drone in mid-air. On the ground, a pilot controlled the DAST vehicle from a remote cockpit while researchers in another room monitored flight data transmitted via telemetry. They made decisions on the conduct of the flight while the DAST was in the air. In case of failure in any of the ground systems, the DAST vehicle could also be flown to a recovery site using a backup control system in the F-104.

The DAST Program experienced numerous problems. Only eighteen flights were achieved, eight of them captive (in which the aircraft flew only while still attached to the launch aircraft). Four of the flights were aborted and two resulted in crashes--one on June 12, 1980, and the second on June 1, 1983. Meanwhile, flight experiments with higher profiles, better funded remotely piloted research vehicles took priority over DAST missions. After the 1983 crash, which was caused by a malfunction that disconnected the landing parachute from the drone, the program was disbanded.

Because DAST drones were considered expendable, certain losses were anticipated. Managers and researchers involved in other high-risk flight projects gained insights from the DAST program that could be applied to their own flight research programs. The DAST aircraft had a wingspan of 14 feet, four inches and a nose-to-tail length of 28 feet, 4 inches. The fuselage had a radius of about 2.07 feet. The aircraft's maximum loaded weight was about 2,200 pounds. It derived its power from a Continental YJ69-T-406 engine.
Дата Снято: 1 августа 1977
Источник https://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Photo/DAST/HTML/ECN-8113.html; see also https://www.dvidshub.net/image/713670
Автор NASA/Dryden Flight Research Center
Posted
InfoField
10 октября 2012, 17:29
DVIDS ID
InfoField
713670
Это изображение или видеозапись внесены в каталог Центра лётных исследований имени Армстронг НАСА под идентификатором (Photo ID): ECN-8113 и под альтернативным идентификатором: NIX-ECN-8113.

Этот шаблон не указывает на правовой статус данной работы. По-прежнему необходим нормальный шаблон лицензий. См. Commons:Лицензирование.
Другие языки:

Лицензирование

Public domain Этот файл находится в общественном достоянии (англ. public domain), так как он был создан NASA (Национальным управлением по аэронавтике и исследованию космического пространства). Политика авторского права NASA гласит, что «Материал NASA не защищается авторским правом, если не указано иное». (См. Template:PD-USGov, страницу политики авторского права NASA или политику использования изображений JPL.)
Предупреждения:

Краткие подписи

Добавьте однострочное описание того, что собой представляет этот файл

Элементы, изображённые на этом файле

изображённый объект

image/jpeg

5 735 133 байт

2347 пиксель

3000 пиксель

История файла

Нажмите на дату/время, чтобы посмотреть файл, который был загружен в тот момент.

Дата/времяМиниатюраРазмерыУчастникПримечание
текущий05:46, 29 декабря 2020Миниатюра для версии от 05:46, 29 декабря 20203000 × 2347 (5,47 МБ)HuntsterCropped 12 % vertically using CropTool with lossless mode.
05:45, 29 декабря 2020Миниатюра для версии от 05:45, 29 декабря 20203000 × 2670 (5,91 МБ)HuntsterFull resolution from NASA
17:06, 15 апреля 2015Миниатюра для версии от 17:06, 15 апреля 20151536 × 1367 (519 КБ)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{milim | description = {{en|1=the course of the flight research. The Firebee II was a supersonic drone selected as the DAST testbed because its wing could be easily replaced, it used only tail-mounted control surfaces, and it wa...

Следующая страница использует этот файл:

Метаданные