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Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) drone flights at Moffett Field

eight arm large drone on ground with historic unskinned hangar one in background at Ames Research Center
NASA

In June and August 2020, researchers at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California conducted Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) flight tests of drone aircraft at Moffett Field at Ames.  The purpose of the flight test was to investigate the feasibility of a concept called Time-Based Conformance Monitoring (TBCM).  Conformance monitoring is an important task of air traffic controllers or UAS traffic management services that will be implemented in the future in which they monitor whether aircraft are adhering to their assigned flight trajectories.  TBCM extends that concept by continuously evaluating the times required for aircraft to maintain those trajectories.  For the tests at Moffett Field, five specifically designed flight profiles were successfully flown over 26 flights to gather data for the TBCM concept evaluation.  This type of research is applicable to the burgeoning growth of UAS aircraft into areas such as package delivery and potentially even air taxis.

UTM project and Smart Mobility at Ames team
UTM project and Smart Mobility at Ames team pictured from the Unmanned Aircraft (UA). Participants (from left to right): Jonas Jonsson (Pilot in Command), Steve Patterson (Range Safety Officer), Jaewoo Jung (Flight Director), Hemil Modi (Research Engineer), Zach Roberts (Flight Engineer)
Zach Roberts and Jonas Jonsson
UTM project and Smart Mobility at Ames team getting ready for operation
UTM project and Smart Mobility at Ames team getting ready for operation. Participants (from left to right): Zack Roberts (Flight Engineer), Jonas Jonsson (Pilot in Command), Steve Patterson (Range Safety Officer)
Jaewoo Jung
A drone in flight against blue skies.
UA in operation.
Zach Roberts