Engineering team developing helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters
Students at Virginia Tech's Unmanned Systems Laboratory are perfecting an autonomous helicopter they hope will never be used for its intended purpose. Roughly six feet long and weighing 200 pounds, the re-engineered aircraft is designed to fly into American cities blasted by a nuclear weapon or dirty bomb. Source: Virginia Tech - Discipline: Technology
Engineering team developing helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters
Students at Virginia Tech's Unmanned Systems Laboratory are perfecting an autonomous helicopter they hope will never be used for its intended purpose. Roughly six feet long and weighing 200 ...
Thu 4 Mar 10 from PhysOrg
Featured - Engineering team developing helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters, Thu 4 Mar 10 from Labspaces.net
Engineering team developing helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters, Thu 4 Mar 10 from Eurekalert
Unmanned Helicopter Would Investigate Nuclear Disasters, Wed 3 Mar 10 from Newswise
Engineering team developing helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters, Thu 4 Mar 10 from ScienceDaily
Developing a helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters, Thu 4 Mar 10 from R&D Mag
Engineering team developing helicopter that would investigate nuclear disasters, Thu 4 Mar 10 from Science Blog
UAV for nuclear scouting missions
Students at Virginia Tech are modifying a remote-controlled helicopter to fly autonomous missions over and around areas hit by a nuclear attack.
Fri 5 Mar 10 from The Engineer
Unmanned helicopter would investigate nuclear disasters
Students are perfecting an autonomous helicopter they hope will never be used for its intended purpose. Roughly six feet long and weighing 200 pounds, the re-engineered aircraft is designed ...
Sat 6 Mar 10 from ScienceDaily
Small Helicopter Will Investigate Nuclear Disasters
Blacksburg, Va. -- Students at Virginia Tech's Unmanned Systems Laboratory are perfecting an autonomous helicopter they hope will never be used for its intended purpose.
Thu 4 Mar 10 from RedOrbit