Aurora Goldeneye
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Template:Wikidata image| Role | Reconnaissance UAVTemplate:Short description |
|---|---|
| National origin | United States |
| Manufacturer | Aurora Flight Sciences |
| First flight | 2003 |
The Aurora Goldeneye is a reconnaissance UAV under development in the United States of America during the first decade of the 21st century. It is a ducted fan design in roughly the same class as the Sikorsky Cypher II. This UAV was built under a DARPA contract and is apparently focused on covert or special forces operations.
The Goldeneye is a "tail-sitter" or "pogo" machine that takes off and lands straight up. It is a stumpy-looking machine with four tailfins, each with landing gear on the fintip, and a wing that pivots, allowing it to be aligned with the aircraft centerline in cruise flight and at a right angle to the centerline in hover flight.
The Goldeneye is built of graphite and fiberglass composites, and has a low radar, infrared, and acoustic signature. It is powered by a 28 kW (38 hp) Wankel-rotary engine from AV Engines Ltd[1] in the UK. It has an autonomous flight control system with GPS-INS navigation.
The Goldeneye can carry a small electo-optic sensor turret or other payload and features a radio datalink. Apparently the DARPA specification mysteriously required that it be able to carry "two coke-can size payloads" that were not described further. Aurora is working on a half-scale version of the Goldeneye for commercial sales.
Specifications (Goldeneye 100)
References
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This article contains material that originally came from the web article Unmanned Aerial VehiclesTemplate:Category handler[<span title="Script error: No such module "string".">usurped]Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". by Greg Goebel, which exists in the Public Domain.