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Airborne Subscale Transport Aircraft Research Testbed - Aircraft Model Development
Author(s) -
Thomas Jordan,
William Langford,
Jeffrey Hill
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation, and control conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2005-6432
Subject(s) - testbed , airframe , emulation , aerospace engineering , flight envelope , actuator , telecommunications link , engineering , aeronautics , computer science , simulation , automotive engineering , aerodynamics , telecommunications , electrical engineering , economics , economic growth
The Airborne Subscale Transport Aircraft Research (AirSTAR) testbed being developed at NASA Langley Research Center is an experimental flight test capability for research experiments pertaining to dynamics modeling and control beyond the normal flight envelope. An integral part of that testbed is a 5.5% dynamically scaled, generic transport aircraft. This remotely piloted vehicle (RPV) is powered by twin turbine engines and includes a collection of sensors, actuators, navigation, and telemetry systems. The downlink for the plane includes over 70 data channels, plus video, at rates up to 250 Hz. Uplink commands for aircraft control include over 30 data channels. The dynamic scaling requirement, which includes dimensional, weight, inertial, actuator, and data rate scaling, presents distinctive challenges in both the mechanical and electrical design of the aircraft. Discussion of these requirements and their implications on the development of the aircraft along with risk mitigation strategies and training exercises are included here. Also described are the first training (non-research) flights of the airframe. Additional papers address the development of a mobile operations station and an emulation and integration laboratory.

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