Unmanned Aircraft Inspect Energy Pipeline
A fixed-wing unmanned aircraft was used to inspect an energy pipeline route with a piloted chase plane following behind to ensure safety beyond the ground observers' sight line. The flight was a step toward making aerial inspections of energy pipelines safer and more economical. The test aircraft was equipped with a special sensor package to identify threats to pipeline integrity.
The research is part of Pipeline Research Council International’s Right Of Way Automated Monitoring (RAM) Project, which is looking at innovative technologies to improve and automate pipeline monitoring in the United States and internationally. Energy pipelines are mainly buried underground. Damage may inadvertently occur during land clearing, construction, or farming work.
One of the objectives of the project is to enhance aerial surveillance of the right of way through unmanned aircraft and other techniques, with the ultimate goal being continuous, real-time detection and reporting of machinery threats to pipeline integrity.
Top Stories
INSIDERElectronics & Computers
Army Launches CMOSS Prototyping Competition for Computer Chassis and Cards
INSIDERSoftware
The Future of Aerospace: Embracing Digital Transformation and Emerging...
ArticlesAerospace
Making a Material Difference in Aerospace & Defense Electronics
INSIDERRF & Microwave Electronics
Germany's New Military Surveillance Jet Completes First Flight
ArticlesAerospace
Microchip’s New Microprocessor to Enable Generational Leap in Spaceflight...
EditorialConnectivity
Webcasts
Power
Phase Change Materials in Electric Vehicles: Trends and a Roadmap...
Automotive
Navigating Security in Automotive SoCs: How to Build Resilient...
Automotive
Is Hydrogen Propulsion Production-Ready?
Unmanned Systems
Countering the Evolving Challenge of Integrating UAS Into Civilian Airspace
Power
Designing an HVAC Modeling Workflow for Cabin Energy Management and XiL Testing
Defense
Best Practices for Developing Safe and Secure Modular Software