'Fly-by-wireless' plane takes to the air

  • 1 Respostas
  • 1473 Visualizações
*

dremanu

  • Investigador
  • *****
  • 1254
  • Recebeu: 1 vez(es)
  • +7/-18
'Fly-by-wireless' plane takes to the air
« em: Junho 07, 2006, 11:57:49 pm »
Da revista "New Scientist"
===============================================

'Fly-by-wireless' plane takes to the air

    * 16:31 16 May 2006
    * NewScientist.com news service
    * Duncan Graham-Rowe

A plane with no wires or mechanical connections between its engine, navigation system and onboard computers - only a wireless network - is being built by engineers in Portugal.

The 3-metre-long uncrewed plane "AIVA" will rely entirely upon a Bluetooth wireless network to relay messages back and forth between critical systems – a technique dubbed "fly-by-wireless".

Tests flights on a partly wireless prototype carried out in Portugal have shown that the system works well. Cristina Santos, at Minho University in Portugal, who developed the plane, says the aim is primarily to reduce weight and power requirements. "Also, if you do not have the cables then the system is much more flexible to changes," she says.

Editor's note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly reported that a fully-wireless version of AIVA had already flown. We sincerely apologise for this mistake.

Many modern planes already use electronic wires, instead of the mechanical links and cables found in older planes, to connect components. This is a lighter and more compact way to control these systems. Some planes, such as the Boeing 777 even use optical fibres, which can carry multiple signals through a single cable.
Radio jamming

Replacing wires with wireless radio links is a logical next step says Peter Mellor from the Centre for Software Reliability at City University in London, UK, who was not involved with the project. But he adds that it raises completely new safety issues.

Such wireless links could be susceptible to electromagnetic interference or even jamming, Mellor suggests. And it could be more difficult to build in back-up wireless connections, he says. "If you jam one link you would jam both," he warns.

But Santos and colleagues are working on this. She says Bluetooth is already fairly resistant to disruption as it is designed to guarantee a certain minimum data stream will always get through. "It has mechanisms for dealing with interference," she says.
In-car radio

Even so, Santos says the system would need extensive testing before she would be willing to ride in a fly-by-wireless plane. She also admits that stringent aviation regulations may mean the technology first appears in cars rather than planes.

"Cables are already a problem in cars," Santos says, because many manufacturers cram ever more electronic gadgetry into each new model.

She admits the idea of having no physical connections may seem scary at first but believes ultimately it will become an accepted way to control brakes and even steering mechanisms in road vehicles.

The findings were presented on Tuesday at the International Conference of Robotics and Autonomous Systems in Florida, US.
Related Articles

    * Uncrewed combat plane prototypes revealed
    * http://www.newscientisttechnology.com/article/dn8596
    * 17 January 2006
    * Aviation - The shape of wings to come
    * http://www.newscientisttechnology.com/article/dn7552
    * 29 June 2005
    * Now who's in the driver's seat?
    * http://www.newscientisttechnology.com/a ... 024203.500
    * 08 November 2003

Weblinks

    * Cristina Santos
    * http://dei-s1.dei.uminho.pt/pessoas/cri ... efault.htm
    * Peter Mellor, City University
    * http://www.csr.city.ac.uk/staff/mellor/
    * International Conference of Robotics and Autonomous Systems
    * http://www.icra2006.org/
"Esta é a ditosa pátria minha amada."
 

*

USB80

  • 42
  • +0/-0
(sem assunto)
« Responder #1 em: Junho 19, 2006, 11:34:49 pm »
Uma ideia muito à frente, embora o passo lógico seguinte. O controlo wireless de sistemas críticos como o controlo de um avião pressupõe para já muito risco e se algúm dia passar a ser standard só será depois de muito desenvolvimento, testes e certificações. Não podemos esquecer que as interferências são um factor muito crítico, é possível interferir ("jamming" na giria técnica) uma banda inteira de comunicações via rádio sem que se possa fazer muito para anular a interferência, a não ser dispor de outra faixa de frequências diferente à interferida que passaria a ser usada como alternativa. Os sistemas de guerra e contramedidas electrónicas "sabem" muito disto.
Agora, não duvido que num futuro possa a vir a ser uma realidade segura e fiável, assim como sucedeu aquando da introdução do sistema "fly-by-wire" amplamante difundido hoje. Mas vamos ter que esperar talvez bastante tempo.
"Common sense is the less common of the senses"