Micro Air Vehicles - Toward a New Dimension in Flight
James M. McMichael Program Manager Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
and
Col. Michael S. Francis, USAF (Ret.) formerly of Defense Airborne Reconnaissance
Office
8/7/97
Introduction
The small speck in the sky approaches in virtual silence, unnoticed by the large gathering of soldiers below. In
flight, its tiny size and considerable agility evade all but happenstance recognition. After hovering for a few short
seconds, it perches on a fifth floor window sill, observing the flow of men and machines on the streets below.
Several kilometers away, the platoon leader watches the action on his wrist monitor. He sees his target and sends
the signal. The tiny craft swoops down on the vehicle, alighting momentarily on the roof. It senses the trace of a
suspected chemical agent and deploys a small tagging device, attaching it to the vehicle. Just seconds later it is
back in the sky, vanishing down a narrow alley. Mission accomplished....
Sound like science fiction? This scenario may be closer than you think if success is achieved in the development of
a new class of flight vehicles, the Micro Air Vehicles (MAVs), by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA). The high level of current interest in developing a class of very small flight vehicles is the result of the
nearly simultaneous emergence of their technological feasibility and an array of compelling new military needs,
especially in urban environments.
The predicted spectrum of conflict for 21st Century warfighters has influenced and motivated the new development.
The shift toward a more diverse array of military operations, often involving small teams of individual soldiers
operating in non-traditional environments (e.g. urban centers), is already more than evident in the post-cold war
experience. MAVs are envisioned as an asset at the platoon level or below. Locally owned and operated, they will
greatly reduce the latency inherent in current reconnaissance assets. They will give the individual soldier ondemand information about his surroundings, resulting in unprecedented situational awareness, greater effectiveness
and fewer casualties.
Technological feasibility follows from advances in several micro-technologies, including the rapid evolution of
micro-electromechanical systems, also known as MEMS. These systems combine micro electronics components
with comparably - sized mechanical elements of varying complexity to achieve useful, and often unique
functionality (e.g. integrated systems of sensors, actuators and processors). In many cases, these devices are
produced with established micro fabrication techniques, providing a high degree of optimism for eventual low-cost
production potential. Other maturing micro systems such as tiny CCD-array cameras, equally small infra-red
sensors and chip-sized hazardous substance detectors, have been catalytic in providing the motivation for like-sized
delivery platforms. Yet formidable technical challenges must be met to successfully integrate these payloads into
functional MAV systems. Innovative technical solutions must be found for aerodynamics and control, propulsion
and power, navigation, and communication.
The earliest suggestions of technical viability appeared in the early 1990's from studies such as RAND
Corporation's investigation of microsystems 1, and MIT Lincoln Laboratory's early investigations of micro flyers 2.
The latter's more recent study helped energize a DARPA workshop on Micro Air Vehicle feasibility in the fall of
1995. The outcome of that effort has been a newly created DARPA program to develop this new dimension in
flight. The DARPA program was initiated early last fall through the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
Program, together with a more detailed study by Lincoln Laboratory.
What is a Micro Air Vehicle?
The term, Micro Air Vehicle, may be somewhat misleading if interpreted too literally. We tend to think of flying
model aircraft as "miniature", so the term "micro" now alludes to a class of significantly smaller vehicles. But
MAVs are not small versions of larger aircraft. They are affordable, fully functional, militarily capable, small flight
vehicles in a class of their own. The definition employed in DARPA's program limits these craft to a size less than
15 cm (about 6 inches) in length, width or height. This physical size puts this class of vehicle at least an order of
magnitude smaller than any missionized UAV developed to date.
MAVs should be thought of as aerial robots, as six-degree-of-freedom machines whose mobility can deploy a
useful micro payload to a remote or otherwise hazardous location where it may perform any of a variety of
missions, including reconnaissance and surveillance, targeting, tagging and bio-chemical sensing.
Although the 15 cm limitation may appear somewhat arbitrary, it derives from both physics and technology
considerations. To fully appreciate the scale implications, we can compare this class of vehicle with other familiar
systems, as in Figure 1. This is a plot of vehicle gross weight vs Reynolds number. The Reynolds number (a
measure of size multiplied by speed) is perhaps the most useful single parameter for characterizing the flight
environment. The smallest current missionized UAV is the "Sender", developed and operated by the Naval
Research Laboratory. Sender boasts a 4 foot wing span and weighs only 10 pounds - impressive specifications for
its near 100 mile range capability. MAVs are an order of magnitude smaller and may display a wide variety of
configurations, depending on specific mission requirements.
Figure 1. The Micro Air Vehicle Flight Regime Compared to Existing Flight Vehicles
The low Reynolds number regime is significant in that it projects a fundamental shift in physical behavior at MAV
scales and speeds - an environment more common to the smallest birds and the largest insects. While naturalists
have seriously studied bird and insect flight for more than half a century, our basic understanding of the
aerodynamics encountered here is very limited. Neither the range - payload performance of bees and wasps nor the
agility of the dragonfly is predictable with more familiar high Reynolds number aerodynamics traditionally used in
UAV design. And if our understanding of low Reynolds number effects is limited, our ability to mechanize flight
under these conditions has been even more elusive.
With the small size of the MAV comes high surface-to-volume ratios and severely constrained weight and volume
limitations. The technology challenge to develop and integrate all the physical elements and components necessary
to sustain this new dimension in flight will require an unprecedented level of multifunctionality among the system
components. The traditional "stuffing the shell" paradigm of conventional aircraft design is not likely to be
workable for MAVs.
Yet to be developed, Micro Air Vehicles will be roughly one-tenth the scale of the Sender, and the weight of a sixinch, fixed-wing MAV may be only 50 grams or so, just one one-hundredth the weight of the Sender. Figure 2
illustrates the difference in size. Yet MAVs must be capable of staying aloft for perhaps 20 to 60 minutes while
carrying a payload of 20 grams or less to a distance of perhaps 10 km. Finding high density sources of propulsion
and power is a pivotal challenge. And while the Sender is a conventional, moderate aspect-ratio, fixed-wing
aircraft, MAVs may require more unusual configurations and approaches ranging from low aspect-ratio fixed wings
to rotary wings, or even more radical notions like flapping wings.
Maximum-Sized (15 cm) Micro Air Vehicle Sender
Figure 2. Size Comparison Between an MAV Concept Vehicle and a Small UAV
Why Micro Air Vehicles?
Why "micro"? Why not something larger? The answer lies in the applications envisioned for MAVs. Studies like
the Defense Science Board's 1996 Summer Study on "Tactics and Technologies for 21st Century Warfighting"
emphasize keeping personnel out of harms way by providing unprecedented situational awareness right down to the
platoon level. In contrast to higher-level reconnaissance assets like satellites and high altitude UAVs, MAVs will be
operated by and for the individual soldier in the field as a platoon-level asset, providing local reconnaissance or
other sensor information on demand, where and when it is needed. MAVs may also be used for tagging, targeting,
and communications, and may eventually find application as weapons, as well.
The reconnaissance application is a primary driver behind the first generation of MAVs. Micro sensors like those
mentioned earlier suggest the possibility of reduced latency and greatly enhanced situational awareness for the
small unit or individual soldier. This is partly attributed to the direct connectivity envisioned between these systems
and the "user" in emerging operational concepts. Direct connectivity means the user has to carry it. So the MAV
must trade favorably with other soldier assets - like water and ammunition. The system must also be affordable. It
must have a vanishingly small logistics tail, and for many missions it must be intrinsically covert. All this points to
a highly compact, small system.
Additionally, the MAV's ability to operate in constrained environments like urban canyons and, eventually, even the
interior of buildings, gives these systems a level of uniqueness unmatched by other concepts. MAVs are not
replacements for previously manned air vehicle missions; because of their size, they will be capable of completely
new missions not possible with any existing systems.
More on Missions
Micro Air Vehicles will be capable of a wide range of useful military missions. The one most often identified by
users is the textbook, "over the hill" reconnaissance mission illustrated in Figure 3A. The current concept suggests
that reconnaissance MAVs need to range out to perhaps 10 km, remain aloft for up to an hour, reach speeds of 10 to
20 m/s (22 to 45 mph), and be capable of real time day/night imagery. In contrast, some surveillance applications
may require less range - payload performance. In these instances, the MAV would relocate to a suitable vantage
point and serve as a fixed, unattended surface sensor with capabilities ranging from imagery to seismic detection.
Figure 3A. The "Over-The-Hill Reconnaissance" Mission for the MAV
At the same time, MAVs must be launched and operated relatively simply with an easy-to-operate ground station.
Ground stations may employ directional antennas to maintain contact with the MAV at long range.
In urban operations (see Figure 3B), MAVs, acting in small, cooperative groups, will enable reconnaissance and
surveillance of inner city areas, and may serve as communication relays. They may also enable observations
through windows, and sensor placement on vertical and elevated surfaces. Their application to building interiors is
the most demanding envisioned. The capability to navigate complex shaped passageways, avoid obstacles and relay
information will require yet another level of technology.
Figure 3B. Urban Operations Missions for the MAV
Biochemical sensing, illustrated in Figure 3C is another potential mission for MAVs. With gradient sensors and
flight control feedback, MAVs will be able to map the size and shape of hazardous clouds and provide real time
tracking of their location.
Figure 3C. The MAV as a Mobile Immersion Sensor
MAVs may also find application in search and rescue operations. An MAV could be packed into the ejection seat
mechanism on fighter aircraft. If the pilot has to "punch out", the MAV is released from the ejection seat and lingers
in the air for up to an hour, providing the downed pilot with reconnaissance information, or sending a signal to
rescue vehicles.
While the challenge of developing self-propelled MAVs capable of achieving all the requirements alluded to
previously is daunting, a more near-term application may be possible using assisted propulsion. Unpropelled MAVs
could be launched from overhead flight vehicles or from barrel-launched munitions. Upon release above a target
area, MAVs could provide targeting information and battle damage assessment back to the operator.
A large number of potential commercial applications also exist. These include traffic monitoring, border
surveillance, fire and rescue operations, forestry, wildlife surveys, power-line inspection and real-estate aerial
photography, to name a few.
The Technical Challenge
The development and fielding of militarily useful MAVs will require overcoming a host of significant technology
and operational obstacles.
....Putting it Together
The physical integration challenge is believed to be the most difficult problem, the degree of which increases
dramatically with decreasing vehicle size or increasing functional complexity. At and below the 15 cm scale size,
the concept of "stuffing" an airframe with subsystems - our conventional approach to hardware integration becomes extremely difficult. An examination of the range of system elements illustrates the problem (Figure 4).
Figure 4. MAV System Integration
Many of the system functions depicted will be provided by microelectronics or MEMS-based components. Even
so, separate modules for each function would consume more volume than may be available. From an electronics
perspective, the on-board processor and communications electronics form the core of the vehicle. They provide
critical links between the sensor systems and the ground station, and they are vital to the flight and propulsion
control systems. In the scheme depicted in Figure 4, Power generation and propulsion subsystems support critical
electronics and flight control functions in addition to flight propulsion power. The multifunctionality required by
the MAV weight and power budgets may be achieved only by a highly integrated design, with physical components
serving multiple purposes, or accomplishing multiple and often diverse functions. For example, the wings may also
serve as antennae or as sensor apertures. The power source may be integrated with the fuselage structure, and so on.
The degree of design 'synergy' required has never been achieved in a flight vehicle design.
....Achieving Stable Controlled Flight
Flight control is the single technological area which harbors the largest numbers of unknowns for the MAV
designer. Relatively large forces and moments can be produced by the laminar-flow-dominated flight environment,
and they are difficult to predict under all but the most benign flight conditions. Unsteady flow effects arising from
atmospheric gusting or even vehicle maneuvering are far more pronounced on small scale MAVs where inertia is
almost nonexistent, that is, where wing loading is very light. Platform stabilization and guidance will require rapid,
highly autonomous control systems.
One common trend in aircraft and in nature is that smaller flyers travel slower and tend to have a higher ratio of
wing area to vehicle weight. Given the limited wingspan available, MAVs may have to achieve high relative wing
areas by having larger chords, i.e. by using configurations with low aspect ratio (wingspan divided by chord), more
like flying wings, or butterflies. So MAVs may have to cope with fully three-dimensional aerodynamics. Here, there
are even less low-Reynolds number data available than there are for two-dimensional airfoils. To make matters
worse, MAVs will experience highly unsteady flows due to the natural gustiness (turbulence) of the atmosphere.
Interestingly, natures flyers of the same scale use another source of unsteady aerodynamics, flapping wings, to
create both lift and propulsive thrust. For some applications, MAVs may ultimately have to do the same.
These low Reynolds number effects will have to be mastered using highly integrated flight control systems, with
autonomous stabilization. In confined areas like urban canyons and interior spaces, autonomous collision avoidance
systems will also be required.
....Getting From Here to There
Small scale propulsion systems will have to satisfy extraordinary requirements for high energy density and high
power density. Acoustically quiet systems will also have to be developed to assure covertness.
To better understand some of the propulsion issues, consider the power equation for a propeller driven aircraft as
shown in Figure 5. This relationship provides insight into ways to reduce the power required for propulsion. First,
we need good aerodynamics (high lift to drag ratio). But low Reynolds number wings may only have 1/3 to 1/4 the
lift to drag ratio of conventional aircraft. Propeller aerodynamics must also be efficient, but propellers below about
3 inches in diameter have poor efficiency, on the order of 50 percent less. So low Reynolds numbers affect
propulsion in two ways: Poor lift to drag ratios increase the power required, and propeller efficiencies are low.
The power required can be reduced considerably by having low wing loading, achieved in MAVs by having large
wing areas and lightweight vehicles. The Gossamer Albatross had a huge wing area (and low weight) so that it
could be powered by a very weak engine (human power). But this was done with huge wing spans. In contrast, the
15 cm limitation means MAVs may have to maximize area by increasing the wing chord, leading to low aspect
ratio configurations.
Finally, still in reference to the power equation, theres nothing more effective than low weight to reduce power
requirements. Technologies like MEMS, low power electronics, and component multifunctionality will help. High
energy density (i.e. light-weight) power sources are essential. Battery-based systems will likely power the first
generation MAVs, but more exotic technologies like fuel cells are being developed for follow-on systems.
Figure 5. Minimization of MAV Propulsive Power
If the power and propulsion problems appear daunting, the issue of navigation may be even more so. Large reaches
of open air environments may render this problem doable with in-hand technology, but the more demanding
environments to which the MAV is uniquely suited are another matter. GPS would be a near-ideal solution, but
current systems are much too heavy and too power-intensive for MAV applications. Inertial navigation for MAVs
awaits the development of low-drift micro gyros and accelerometers. Constricted corridors of complex geometry,
multiple obstacles - and some of them moving -must all be reckoned with if the MAV is to become useful to the
warfighter. Real time human interaction to provide vehicle stabilization and guidance is being considered for early
designs, but performance or other mission constraints may render this solution impractical in some of the more
demanding applications. For example, necessary vehicle agility (or gust response) may well surpass a human
operators ability to cope with it, and real-time human controls may not be possible except in the simplest of
scenarios. Clearly, significant advances in miniature navigation, guidance and control systems are needed.
....In Touch with the Users
Success in any MAV mission rests with ability to establish a successful, robust communications link between the
MAV and its user/operator. Figure 6 illustrates some of the factors influencing the communication systems design.
Communication problems relate primarily to the small vehicle size, hence small antenna size, and to the limited
power available to support the bandwidth required (2-4 megabits per second) for image transmission. Control
functions demand much lower bandwidth capabilities, in the 10's of kilobits range, at most. Image compression
helps reduce the bandwidth requirement, but this increases on-board processing and hence power requirements. The
limited power budget means the omni-directional signal will be quite weak. So directional ground antennas may be
required to track the vehicle, using line-of-sight transmissions. But limitations to line-of-sight would be severely
restrictive for urban operations, so other approaches will have to be found. One approach is to explore cellular
communication architectures.
Figure 6. Issues Influencing MAV Communications
....MAV Payloads
The first generation MAVs will be equipped with sensor packages to accomplish various reconnaissance or
surveillance tasks. A variety of sensors will have to be adapted and integrated into MAV systems. These may
include optical, IR, acoustic, bio-chemical, nuclear, and others.
A visible imaging system is perhaps the most sought after payload for initial MAV applications and it fortunately
employs the most mature of the micro sensor technologies. Figure 7 depicts a tiny video camera system envisioned
by Lincoln Laboratory. The camera would weigh only 1 gram and occupy roughly one cubic centimeter, as shown
in comparison to a deer fly. The camera would have 1000x1000 pixels and require as little as 25 milliwatts of
power. The Lincoln Laboratory study suggests that this concept is feasible with emerging technology in about two
years.
To add more substance to the discussion, consider the use of this payload in a compatible MAV design (Figure 8).
This 8 cm (3 inch) concept vehicle was also studied by Lincoln Laboratory investigators. The overall weight of the
vehicle is only 10 grams, and the total power required is 1 watt. Note that propulsion would require 90 percent of
the available power and 70 percent of the total weight. This vehicle concept envisions a video systems that operates
at only one frame every two seconds. The video system is forward mounted, and looks down at 45 degrees to the
direction of flight. Higher frame rates will increase the demand for high-power and high-energy-density sources.
Additional power would be required for on-board image compression and for higher data rate communications.
Figure 7. MAV Camera Concept (Source - MIT Lincoln Laboratory)
Figure 8. MIT Lincoln Laboratory MAV Concept.
It is more likely that in the near term fixed wing MAVs will be closer to 6 inches in length, weigh on the order of 50
grams and require 8-10 watts of power. Here too, the propulsion systems will consume nearly 90 percent of all
available power, leaving only 10 percent for avionics systems, including communications.
....Soldier Proofing
Building a Micro Air Vehicle that can fly and perform a useful function is indeed a significant challenge. But
fielding a system which can survive in a range of nasty, treacherous military environments increases the challenge
by at least another order of magnitude. External flight issues such as ambient temperatures, winds, moisture, and
salt spray are only a fraction of the problem.
MAVs must be designed to be safe and simple to operate, preferably by an individual soldier. The launch system
must accommodate possible severe initial conditions, such as being launched at speed or at an extreme angle.
Electronic connectivity must be rapid and secure. And control interfaces must involve minimal concentration,
freeing the operator to perform other duties.
The MAV must have a simple logistic tail. It must either be expendable or it must be easy to repair under field
conditions. It must easily integrate into the combatant's field pack, and must be well-protected from hazards,
including shock, until it is operated.
Finally, the MAV must be affordable. Affordability is, to some extent, dictated by the complexity and importance of
the mission. But MAVs will not be fielded in large numbers if their cost is prohibitive. For many of the routine
missions being considered, an expendable MAV must cost no more that an anti-tank round.
A Final Note
Despite the significant challenges facing the MAV developer, all indications are that these systems can be
developed with today's emerging electronic and related technologies. Recognize that this statement permits an
evolution of capability over time that will begin with the simplest of systems and missions. While small scale poses
enormous technical challenges, it offers major advantages, not just in terms of enabling new missions, but in terms
of potentially short fabrication and testing time scales. These "small" time scales may help insure brief "gestation
periods" (development cycle times) for each generation of capability. If this is so, we may optimistically anticipate
a rapid evolution of MAVs to militarily useful and flexible systems in the not-too-distant future.
References:
1. Hundley Richard O., Gritton, Eugene C., "Future Technology-Driven Revolutions in Military Operations,"
Documented Briefing of the RAND National Defense Research Institute, December 1992.
2. Davis, W.R., "Micro UAV," Presentation to 23rd Annual AUVSI Symposium, 15-19 July, 1996.
Approved for Public Release, Distribution Unlimited
Last Updated 12/18/97