Our eye in the sky aims to save lives
Engineering
Shark attacks could be a thing of the past at ÐÂÀË²ÊÆ± beaches thanks to the efforts of a group of final-year engineering students at the University of ÐÂÀË²ÊÆ±. Eight students from the have designed and built an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) with a range of applications including shark patrols, bushwalker rescue, aerial mapping and traffic monitoring. The seven-month project, involving four and four students, has resulted in a plane that can fly without human interaction and stream live video footage from a 10km radius. The project is a landmark achievement for the first cohort of students completing their Bachelor of Aerospace Engineering undergraduate degree in 2007. Team member Jonathan Bannister said the plane was configured primarily for search and rescue and was designed to fly for one hour with a cruising speed of 90km/h. It will be put through its paces at an international UAV competition being held in Queensland on September 25 and 26, involving 35 teams from six countries. "Building this plane has been an incredible challenge for us," Jonathan said. "It has incorporated so many different aspects of engineering, from design through to construction, testing and operation. "The workload has been huge but we have learnt so much about aircraft design, about manufacturing, about computers and communication equipment. It's real aerospace knowledge that we can apply in the real world when we graduate." The September competition, organised by the Australian Research Centre for Aerospace Automation, offers a $40,000 incentive. The prize money will be awarded to the entrant whose plane finds a lost bushwalker in the Queensland outback in the shortest time. Thanks to $50,000 from The Sir Ross and Sir Keith Smith Fund, aerospace company Thales, the School of Mechanical Engineering and other local companies, the students have built what they believe is an outstanding aircraft. "This plane will have a lot of commercial applications," Jonathan said. "The primary one is shark patrol and surf lifesaving surveillance. "At the moment we have fully manned aircraft flying up and down the South Australian coastline, which costs around $1200 a day. If you were |