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NASA Meatball NASA Dryden Unmanned reconnaissance aircraft, Predator B in flight

Technician Dave Brown installs a drilling template during construction of the all-composite left wing of NASA's Altair aircraft at General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., (GA-ASI) facility at Adelanto, Calif. Technician Dave Brown installs a drilling template during construction of the all-composite left wing of NASA's Altair aircraft at General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., (GA-ASI) facility at Adelanto, Calif.

Photo Number: EC02-0188-19
Photo Date: July 10, 2002

Formats: 458x640 JPEG Image (109 KBytes)
917x1280 JPEG Image (532 KBytes)
2400x3350 JPEG Image (4,657 KBytes)

Photo
Description:

Technician Dave Brown installs a drilling template during construction of the all-composite left wing of NASA's Altair aircraft at General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., (GA-ASI) facility at Adelanto, Calif.


Project
Description:

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., is developing the Altair version of its Predator B unmanned reconnaissance aircraft under NASA's Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology (ERAST) project. NASA plans to use the Altair as a technology demonstrator to validate a variety of command and control technologies for UAVs, as well as demonstrate the capability to perform a variety of Earth science missions.

The Altair is designed to carry an 700-lb. payload of scientific instruments and imaging equipment for as long as 32 hours at up to 52,000 feet altitude. Eleven-foot extensions have been added to each wing, giving the Altair an overall wingspan of 86 feet with an aspect ratio of 23. It is powered by a 700-hp. rear-mounted TPE-331-10 turboprop engine, driving a three-blade propeller. Altair is scheduled to begin flight tests in the fourth quarter of 2002, and be acquired by NASA following successful completion of basic airworthiness tests in early 2003 for evaluation of over-the-horizon control, detect, see and avoid and other technologies required to allow UAVs to operate safely with other aircraft in the national airspace.


Photo by: Tom Tschida

Fact Sheet Altair/Predator B

Keywords:

Altair, Predator B, Altair/Predator B, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., unmanned reconnaissance aircraft, technology demonstrator testbed aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, UAV, Earth science missions, photo, image, jpeg, jpg


Last Modified: August 16, 2002
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