autonomous high altitude record

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AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECO AA241X students – Stanford Aero & Astro Advisors: Profs. Juan J. Alonso and Ilan M. Kroo

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AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD. AA241X students – Stanford Aero & Astro Advisors: Profs. Juan J. Alonso and Ilan M. Kroo. AA241X – Design, Construction, and Testing of Autonomous Aircraft. Stanford Aero & Astro course taught by Profs. Alonso and Kroo since 2002 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

AA241X students – Stanford Aero & AstroAdvisors: Profs. Juan J. Alonso and Ilan M. Kroo

Page 2: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

AA241X – Design, Construction, and Testing of Autonomous Aircraft Stanford Aero & Astro course taught by Profs.

Alonso and Kroo since 2002 In one quarter (about 10 weeks): design, build,

flight test and autonomous airplane to fulfill a specified mission, provided: On-board computer with 4 Hz GPS, microprocessor,

pressure altitude (1 oz of weight) Motor, battery, propeller combination

Note that, while the board is capable of having gyros and accelerometers, these are not allowed so that the students have to design a stable airplane

Page 3: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

AA241X – Spring 2009 Edition

Design an electric airplane (< 5 Kg of mass) that autonomously, from launch to landing, is able to set a world altitude record

Target: approximately 15,000 ft AGL Initial flight tests at Lake Lagunita (Stanford Campus)

by climbing to 500ft, descending, and repeating until out of battery (FAA restricts to < 500 ft)

All 4 teams demonstrated between 12,000-15,000 ft of cumulative climb AGL

Flight tests at DFRC, September 10-11 with no ceiling limit. Achieved 8,200 ft because of limitations on the area allowed for flights.

Page 4: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

The entire AA241X class at Lake Lagunita – June 09

Page 5: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Changes for DFRC: New Sensors and Radios Pressure sensors for altitude measurement Voltage reading to automatically

determine end of climb. Planned to use for trim scheduling of elevator and rudder

Xbee’s 2.4Ghz have high baud rate but small range. Migrated to the XSC 900Mhz.

Tested range using a balloon test with the help of Jennifer Schmerling (only tested receive capability)

Page 6: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Issues before DFRC:Autopilot Reliability Board Resets started happening. Decided to save critical data to EEPROM:

Became robust to board resets Board Freezes incidents: Lost 4 planes,

system became almost unusable (guaranteed crash after ~20 minutes or so)

Major review of the code. Found a memory leak that was fixed. More error checking for GPS packages. No more problems

Page 7: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

High Altitude and Long Range Tested that control law was able to fly

back to HOME point from a large distance. Flight tests from Roble Pool then from Sand Hill.

Made sure climb performance and stability were acceptable at high altitude by flight testing at Lake Tahoe.

Page 8: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Configuration modifications during summer (getting ready for DFRC) Suave’s wing + Cero’s fuselage =

CeroSuave Tested 2600mAh batteries: BluePanther

did worse, CeroSuave soared to a total of 4200 m (14,000ft)

Best performance when close to stalling

Page 9: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

State Machine

For fly off: Initialize → Climb → Land Except special cases complicate things:

Loss of GPS Lock Loss of Communication (required by NASA) Flight Termination outside of allowable

airspace (required by NASA)

Page 10: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Weaknesses

Never tested Yagi antenna properly Never tested the beacon (important for

loss comm) in long range Drift with the wind when climbing Inverted servo arm on CeroSuave

Page 11: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Record attempts at NASA DFRC First day

Beautiful windless day Limited to 3000 ft by DFRC (range being

used by others) Tested both planes Noticed communication issues with Yagi Servo arm on CeroSuave kept breaking

Page 12: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Record attempts at NASA DFRC 2nd day

Early morning start Attempted to trim CeroSuave with different

controller… Lost the plane 20 seconds after launch

3 Attempts with BluePanther 2161m, limited by Communication range 2175m, limited by Winds aloft 2498m, Violated airspace limits (provided by DFRC)

and engaged flight termination mode automatically Only used ~40% of battery capacity

Page 13: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Record flight at NASA DFRC

Page 14: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Flight Termination

Westerly Winds 2.8 m/s climb rate, 30 m/s dive speed

Page 15: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

18km/h Westerly Wind

Page 16: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Media Coverage

Story by David Orenstein on Stanford news

blog posts on Wired, AviationWeek, Popular Science

German article on presse.at Podcast by Geoff Bower (TA) on

DIYdrones: their next contest is going to try to beat our record using cumulative climb!

Page 17: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Shuttle Landing

Picture taken by students on the same day they set their record

Page 18: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Setting up at DFRC: 5:45 am 9/11

Page 19: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Getting ready: students with Mike Marston, DFRC

Page 20: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

During flight 1: checking the info on ground computers

Page 21: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Students getting ready for flight 2: Mike Marston and Starla Carroll, our DFRC hosts, in background

Page 22: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Zouhair Mahboubi launches flight 2

Page 23: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

Team picture: Stanford students, profs, DFRC hosts, and the observer (for certifying the altitude record)

Page 24: AUTONOMOUS HIGH ALTITUDE RECORD

With our thanks to NASA and DFRC