Reconnaissance aircraft flying in flocks like insects
Boeing engineers have successfully tested the new technology, which controls many unmanned spy planes as "flocks" of insects.
Recently, Boeing engineers and Johns Hopkins University scientists have collaborated successfully on piloting multiple unmanned drivetrain systems at the same time. The test was conducted with the ScanEagle unmanned aerial vehicle in Oregon, USA.
A Boeing's ScanEagle drones
With the new technology, a ground operator using only a military radio device and a laptop can connect with many unmanned aircraft and control them to perform simultaneous missions. simultaneous.
"This new technology in the future will help fighters in the battlefield be able to request and receive important intelligence and reconnaissance information directly from unmanned aerial vehicles rather than having to contact them through the controls. " said Gabriel Santander, director of Boeing's unmanned aerial vehicle program, on the Daily Mail.
Boeing also said that the advantage of developing multiple drone control systems at the same time could help reduce costs while unmanned aerial vehicles can perform more missions with less risky.
US military scientists are also working to incorporate the technology to control many unmanned aircraft with unmanned aerial vehicles simulating insects in nature. These insects can be used in reconnaissance missions on the battlefield and search for victims stranded in ruins.
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