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ROBOTICS

Global Hawk UAV gets bigger and more capable

By Mike Hanlon

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Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk RQ-4A

Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk RQ-4A

Image Gallery (16 images)

According to U.S. Joint Forces Command, during 22 individual sorties it flew during the yearlong series of joint deployment exercises, Global Hawk proved its military worth by providing critical intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities to the war-fighting community.

To demonstrate interoperability between U.S. and Australian military systems, Global Hawk flew 7,500 miles nonstop across the Pacific to Australia on April 22-23, 2001, setting several new world records for UAV endurance. U.S. and Australian Defence Science Technology Organisation officials evaluated the UAV’s performance and future military potential during 11 sorties in the land-sea environment before it flew home to Edwards AFB, Calif., six weeks later.

In October 2003, the Air Force demonstrated Global Hawk’s capabilities to the German Ministry of Defence in northern Germany. Following a ferry flight from Edwards Air Force Base to Nordholz, Germany, an RQ-4A Global Hawk high-altitude, long-endurance (HALE) unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) equipped with a EADS electronic intelligence (ELINT) sensor prototype performed a series of flight demonstrations over a six-week deployment. Germany is considering a derivative of the Global Hawk, dubbed Euro Hawk, for its high altitude endurance UAV requirement.

Global Hawk is now in low rate initial production. Northrop Grumman delivered the first production Global Hawk air vehicle to the Air Force in 2003. There are currently four production air vehicles and four technology demonstration air vehicles in the Air Force inventory. The Navy will take delivery of the first of two Global Hawks this summer. The two Navy Global Hawks are slated for a maritime demonstration later in 2005 at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md.

The current Global Hawk “A” model has a wingspan of 116 feet (35.4 meters) and is 44 feet long (13.5 meters). It can range as far as 12,000 nautical miles (22,236 kilometers) at altitudes up to 65,000 feet (19.8 km), flying at speeds approaching 340 knots (about 400 mph) for as long as 35 hours. During a typical mission, the aircraft can fly 1,200 miles to an area of interest and remain on station for 24 hours.

The new “B” model has a wingspan of 130.9 feet (39.9 meters) and the length will increase to 47.6 feet (14.5 meters). The air vehicle will fly at an altitude of more than 60,000 feet (18.3 kilometers), extend its maximum endurance to 36 hours and maintain 24 hours on station 1,200 miles from its operating location.

The system currently carries an Integrated Sensor Suite consisting of an electro-optical and infrared sensor and a synthetic aperture radar/ground moving target indicator. The cloud-penetrating, day or night sensor package can image an area the size of the U.S. state of Illinois (40,000 nautical square miles) in just 24 hours. Through satellite and ground systems, the imagery can be relayed in near real time to battlefield commanders. The RQ-4B configuration will be outfitted with open system architecture that will allow the air vehicle to carry multiple payloads including systems for collecting signals and electronics intelligence.

When fully fueled for flight, Global Hawk weighs approximately 25,600 pounds. More than half the system’s components are constructed of lightweight, high-strength composite materials, including its wings, wing fairings, empennage, engine cover, engine intake, and three radomes. Its main fuselage is standard aluminum, semi-monocoque construction.

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