A solar-powered uninhabited aerial vehicle (UAV) successfully completed a NASA remote-sensing applications demonstration. The Pathfinder-Plus airplane loitered more than four hours, over Hawaii’s largest coffee plantation on the island of Kauai, taking digital images to make a “clear-sky” mosaic.
The NASA team combined pre-planned, fixed flight lines with spontaneous, remotely controlled maneuvers to guide the UAV into cloud-free areas over the coffee fields. Despite an often 80 percent cloud cover, the project demonstrated how a solar-powered UAV, equipped with a ground-controlled aerial-imaging system, could aid coffee growers by informing them of the ripest fields for daily harvest. This type of technology may eventually aid farmers and ranchers and lead to more effective and efficient harvesting methods.
“Our flight demonstrated the viability of this type of UAV for practical applications,” said Cheryl Yuhas, Suborbital Airborne Sciences program manager, NASA Headquarters, Washington. D.C.. “NASA is committed to taking new technologies, developed for Earth Science research, and showing their practical applications — integrating our technologies into decision-support systems that provide a return on the taxpayers’ investment,” she said.
“This type of aerial platform will ultimately allow for accurate and timely Earth observations over large regions for extended periods of time. They also provide for the efficient return of payloads to Earth at the end of an observation period — something not possible when using satellites,” Yuhas explained.
“The mission demonstrated the capability of this type of aircraft, with downsized digital imaging systems, to collect and quickly deliver high-resolution imagery over localized regions, overcoming the challenging conditions of tropical cloud dynamics,” said Dr. Stan Herwitz, professor of Earth Sciences at Clark University, Worcester, Mass. Herwitz is the principal investigator for the UAV Coffee Project. “An additional significant achievement of this mission was we were flying in national airspace, and the UAV was treated like any conventionally piloted plane by air traffic controllers in Honolulu,” he said.
“During the flight we assembled clear-sky images, even though the plantation was never completely cloud-free,” Herwitz said. “I never thought I’d be this excited on a cloudy day in Kauai. We achieved everything we set out to do and much more,” he said.
There is a significant difference in the value of ripe coffee “cherries” compared to unripe or overripe. By viewing the color patterns in the images, the harvest manager can tell which fields are ripest, and where to send harvest machines. Choosing the fields with the highest percentage of ripe coffee cherries is crucial, because harvest machines shake off all coffee cherries, ripe or not, in each field. “The main variety of coffee grown on this plantation ripens to a yellow color,” Herwitz said. The color of cherries, which contain coffee beans, indicates the degree of ripeness.
“We had a product available for immediate viewing by the coffee harvest manager. Each of the more than 300 high resolution images taken during the mission were transmitted wirelessly to the ground station in less than 20 seconds, and three minutes after receiving an image, we could generate glossy prints showing the coffee fields,” Herwitz said. For part of the mission, an undergraduate student, 2,500 miles away at California State University, Monterey Bay, Calif., controlled one of the digital cameras remotely. Herwitz added, “With the benefit of a downward-looking video on the underside of the UAV, we could direct the aircraft to cloud openings as they were developing.”
“The ‘mobile satellite’ capability this UAV provides is very impressive,” said Herwitz. “When we observed an opening, we flew there to take pictures,” he explained. The loitering capability of Pathfinder-Plus made it possible to acquire cloud-free imagery over virtually all of the plantation’s harvestable acreage.
During the NASA demonstration, the Pathfinder-Plus was based at the U.S. Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility at Barking Sands on Kauai. AeroVironment, Inc., a California company, built and operates the aircraft.
For coffee project information: http://www.clarku.edu/faculty/herwitz.
Imagery: http://amesnews.arc.nasa.gov/releases/2002/02images/coffee/coffee.html
Information about NASA’s Earth Science Enterprise, dedicated to understanding and protecting Earth, while inspiring the next generation of explorers, is at: http://www.earth.nasa.gov
Note to Broadcasters:
NASA TV VIDEO-FILE FOR Oct. 16, 2002 at 3:19 P.M. EDT (12:19 p.m. PST)
NASA TV also plans a replay this item on Thursday, Oct. 17 at 3:00 p.m. EDT (noon PST). Please check http://www.nasa.gov/ntv/ntvweb.html for potential changes to the NASA TV schedule.
ITEM 3- NASA SCANS COFFEE PLANTATIONS FROM ABOVE TO HELP GROWERS – Pathfinder Plus, a remotely-piloted aircraft built by AeroVironment, Inc., recently flew over a Kauai coffee plantation allowing researcher from NASA and Clark University, Worcester, Mass., to test the commercial use of a solar-powered uninhabited aerial vehicle. TRT: 14:53
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