*Pilot Not Included
Military aviation prepares for the inevitable.
- By Michael Milstein
- Air & Space magazine, July 2011
Northrop Grumman’s portrait of the future for naval aviation: the X-47B on the runway in Palmdale, California.
Courtesy Northrop Grumman
(Page 4 of 4)
After it has landed on the noisy flight deck, the X-47B will need two pairs of helping hands. One will belong to a “yellow-shirt,” the standard flight deck crewman who directs pilots of manned aircraft. The yellow-shirt will face the UCAV and perform standard hand signals, while a second crewman will stand behind the yellow-shirt with a remote, watch his commands, then taxi the UCAV with the remote. That remote will be fixed to the crewman’s arm for hands-free efficiency.
Going a step further, Cummings’ MIT team hopes to do away with the remote. The team is developing an advanced technology similar to that used in Microsoft’s Kinect for the Xbox 360 video game. A sensor aboard the UCAV would theoretically see and follow yellow-shirts’ arm movements without anyone wearing a remote. Taxiing across busy decks, the aircraft would track the right person and duplicate the human faith that yellow-shirts and pilots now place in one another, says Yale Song, a graduate student in computer science in Cummings’ lab. “This is about what it means for a robot to communicate with people in a more natural way,” he says. “How do you build that trust that communication depends on?”
Admiral Gary Roughead, the chief of naval operations, wants to see humans and UCAVs working operationally together by 2018. Undersecretary of the Navy Robert Work, a former Marine commander, even co-authored a report a few years ago suggesting that the Navy’s next aircraft carrier could carry UAVs only.
A typical mission scenario doesn’t exist yet. But an operational version of the X-47B would likely take on long-distance, long-duration, long-odds missions that would be difficult or dangerous for pilots. While the UCAV is a demonstrator with no working weapons, military planners foresee its descendants providing 24/7 surveillance and limited attacks in contested airspace, or leading manned aircraft into battle zones. Phantom Ray program manager Craig Brown says that as a pilot, he would instruct loyal UCAVs to stay “out in front of me and launch missiles for me to see if I can get opposing forces to show their hand.”
The Navy and Air Force are funding Cummings’ lab to help smooth the transition from piloted aircraft to robots. Her team is also designing a digital overhaul of the low-tech “ouija board,” a tabletop model of the flight deck that crews fill with tiny airplanes to track deck operations. Computers could take over some of these logistics to improve overall efficiency and safety. Humans and automation “build a better schedule together than either one would on their own,” says Jason Ryan, a graduate student researcher developing the deck management system. But he adds that it all depends on the quality of the decisions made by the human operator, the algorithm, and the interaction between the two.
Every fighter pilot gets a call sign, usually from a play on his or her name or by doing something really stupid. If the UCAV gets a call sign, chances are it won’t be for the latter.
Michael Milstein is a freelance writer in Portland, Oregon.
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Comments (6)
Re: MIT's Missy Cummings:
"As an example of when a pilot is needed on board, she points to the day in January 2009 when Chesley Sullenberger, a former Air Force fighter pilot, used his judgment to select the Hudson River to land his US Airways A320 after geese crippled his engines."
Really, and otherwise the pilots just sit there and look out the windows, is that it?
Missy Cummings is one of the more widely quoted proponents of the pilotless commercial planes concept. She may have a teaching position at MIT, but once again she proves that she has no idea what she is talking about.
Time and time again she reinforces the infuriating myth that modern commercial aircraft are so automated that they basically fly themselves, with the pilots on hand merely as a backup.
This is so untrue that it is hard for me, even as an airline pilot myself, to get my arms around it and begin to explain why and how.
Perhaps Ms. Cummings flew F-18s in the Navy, but she clearly has little or no grasp of what goes on in a commercial airline cockpit, and she ought to be ashamed of herself for perpetuating false notions of how commercial airplanes are flown, and what pilots actually do for a living.
Patrick Smith,
Boston
Posted by Patrick Smith on May 18,2011 | 07:56 PM
With all due respect for Mr. Smith, Professor Cummings, and M.I.T., as well as this writer of this august publication, what we are talking about here is more of an aspiration than a reality.
To suggest that creating an I phone app to pilot a robocopter is in anyway equialent to piloting an F-18 Tomcat is simply ridiculous. If not, then lets turn all the 12 years olds in the world into Navy Piltots tomorrow.
Clearly, the terms "remotely piloted" and "unmanned" are two vastly different notions. The error here is that they appear to have been used interchangably. The termiology is very poorly constructed. This article which should have been a historical piece and a situational survey has turned into an offensive picant article prickling to subjective human sensibilities.
An article which could inspire has turned into one that offends, or was that part of the overall objective?
Posted by Dean Ledbetter on May 25,2011 | 01:43 PM
..sounds like a "post Turtle" to me or- do NOT tear the fence down until you find out just why it was put up.... (not original with me- sorry)
Posted by David H. Stringfield on May 25,2011 | 03:05 PM
I hope that we don't get too overly reliant on UCAVs. The weak links in UCAVs are their data links and reliance on GPS, which can be jammed or destroyed. You can use terrain following radar even with a UCAV to attack a target, but if you lose GPS you are going to have an extremely hard time landing on a carrier. UCAvs will be a great tool in the combat toolbox in the right situations - when you don't want to lose a pilot.
Posted by Bill Wollard on May 26,2011 | 12:19 AM
While I can see why the presence of UCAVs could seem unsafe or threatening to some groups, the technology behind "computer vision", AI, GPS, pattern recognition, accelerometers and other electronics-based sensing is advancing so fast that a UCAV that pilots by itself even without GPS or data link is within the foreseeable future. A natural human tendency has always been to think that no machine can do their jobs and yet machines can take over a variety of tasks and scenarios ever more complex and challenging, more important are issues of accountability, since a machine as thouroughly tested as it can be, it is always subject to error (just like a human!) but we court-martial humans that don't accept orders or punish mistakes, but we cannot court-martial a UCAV for something, or for a missed target, so who will be acocuntable when the record-breaking AI-manned UCAV misses its mark and hits a civilian?
Posted by Bruce Kenobi on June 15,2011 | 06:51 PM
The author either has a clear misunderstanding of what UAVs do, or he is being intentionally misleading. I have to say that I'm disappointed in some of the statements made by former military officers. I know that they understand UAVs, which only leaves the intentionally misleading option. They are contractors trying to sell their wares. You don't have to lie guys. We all know that Remotely Piloted Vehicles are where it's at. But don't play down the importance of an experienced combat pilot sitting at the controls and making the tough decisions. You've left people with the impression that mindless robots are randomly firing missiles. What a terrible (and terribly untrue) concept. Shame on you all, and shame on Air and Space for printing this kind of sensationalist garbage.
Posted by James Hannibal on June 28,2011 | 02:21 PM