Toward the Development of Processes for Assessing the Response of RPAS and UAS to Complex Flow Fields
F-0081-2025-0130
5/20/2025
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ABSTRACT
With recent advancements in the field of Advanced Air Mobility (AAM), including Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing (eVTOL), Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS), and Unmanned Aerial System (UAS), it is beneficial to understand the impact of complex flow features on operations in urban and shipboard environments. Testing methods for studying these impacts, including simulated environments such as wind-tunnel flows and engineered equivalence tests, will need to be adapted to prepare for when the vehicles of interest are too large for the available testing facilities, and to permit low-cost alternatives for industry and government. This work demonstrates a development process that can be used to ensure the complex-flow-environment phenomena can be studied. First, this work illustrates the development of downdraft and turbulence flow types in a wind tunnel setting, and assesses the response of an M600 RPAS to these flows. Then, the same parameters are compared for a Mission Task Element (MTE) that was designed to challenge the RPAS in the vertical direction. Comparison of the two data sets provides insight into both the behaviour of RPAS in complex flows and the challenges of developing engineered equivalence tests.
- Citation
- Wall, A., Barber, H., Lebrasseur, J., and Comeau, P., "Toward the Development of Processes for Assessing the Response of RPAS and UAS to Complex Flow Fields," Vertical Flight Society 81st Annual Forum and Technology Display, Virginia Beach, Virginia, May 20, 2025, https://doi.org/10.4050/F-0081-2025-0130.