Bird-size drone flies 8 minutes in military test

AeroVironment Inc.’s Nano Hummingbird has a wingspan of 6.5 inches and weighs less than a AA battery.
AeroVironment Inc.’s Nano Hummingbird has a wingspan of 6.5 inches and weighs less than a AA battery.

— A pocket-size drone dubbed the Nano Hummingbird for the way it flaps its tiny robotic wings has been developed as a spy plane capable of maneuvering almost invisibly on the battlefield or in urban areas.

The battery-powered drone was built by Monrovia, Calif.-based AeroVironment Inc. for the Pentagon’s research arm as part of a series of experiments in nanotechnology. The little flying machine is built to look like a bird for potential use in espionage and surveillance missions.

The Hummingbird is the result of a five-year effort, announced last week by the company and the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

Equipped with a camera, the drone can fly at speeds of up to 11 mph, AeroVironment said. It can hover and fly sideways, backward and forward, as well as go clockwise and counterclockwise, by remote control for about eight minutes.

The quick flight meets the goals set forth by the government to build a flying “hummingbird-like” aircraft. It also demonstrates the promise of fielding tiny aircraft. Industry insiders see the technology eventually being capable of flying through open windows or sitting on power lines, capturing audio and video information while targets would be none the wiser.

The Hummingbird would be a major departure from existing drones that closely resemble traditional aircraft. The next step is likely to be further refinement of the technology, officials said, before decisions are made about whether the minidrones would be mass-produced and deployed.

“The miniaturization of drones is where it really gets interesting,” said defense expert Peter W. Singer, author of Wired for War, a book about robotic warfare. “You can use these things anywhere, put them anyplace, and the target will never even know they’re being watched.”

With a wingspan of 6.5 inches, the mini-drone weighs about two-thirds of an ounce, or less than a AA battery. The Hummingbird’s guts are made up of motors, communications systems anda video camera. It is slightly larger than the average hummingbird.

In all, the Pentagon has awarded about $4 million to AeroVironment since 2006 to develop the technology and the drone itself.

Matt Keennon, the company’s manager on the project, said it was a technical challenge to create the machine from scratch because it pushes the limitations of aerodynamics.

Less than two years ago, an earlier version of the drone could fly for 20 seconds. Keennon said the current eight minutes of flight are likely to be extended as experiments continue.

“This is a new form of man-made flight,” Keennon said. It is about “biomimicry,” or building a machine that is inspired by nature, he said.

The Pentagon issued seven specific milestones for the Hummingbird, including the ability to hover in a 5 mph wind gust and the ability to fly from outdoors to indoors and back outdoors through a normal-size doorway.

Critics have noted that privacy issues may emerge depending on how the drones are used.

For now, the Hummingbird is just a prototype, Keennon said. But 10 years from now, he sees the technology carrying out detailed reconnaissance missions.

Business, Pages 19 on 02/21/2011

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