Yasmin Arbab, a research associate at NASA’s Ames Research Center, tests a prototype device designed for firefighting drone operators, while piloted aircraft perform fire-training operations in the sky, in Redding, California, on May 3, 2022. Intended to help scale up the use of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) – or drones – in disaster response, the UAS pilot’s kit shown here was developed by NASA’s Scalable Traffic Management for Emergency Response Operations (STEReO) project. Credits: NASA
Even before the summer’s hottest, driest
weather has arrived, wildfires have taken a heavy toll in some parts of the U.S. This
spring, in collaboration with fire response teams, NASA researchers tested
their prototype tools to help make the demanding job of wildland firefighters
safer.
One element of the solution developed by
NASA’s Scalable Traffic Management for Emergency Response
Operations (STEReO)
project focuses on firefighters who operate Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS), or
drones.
Drones are able to capture thermal images
of the landscape below, which can help determine the safest, most effective
approach to fighting a particular fire. Activities in the airspace above such a
disaster become complex, with multiple types of aircraft performing operations.
STEReO’s prototype device, called the UAS pilot’s kit (UASP-kit), notifies
drone pilots where crewed aircraft are positioned, allowing them to safely stay
out of the way.
The NASA team evaluated their UASP-kits in
real-life settings at two field tests this spring – one with multiple stops
across the southern United States, the other in Northern California.
Lynne Martin, a research psychologist at
NASA’s Ames Research Center and member of the Scalable Traffic Management for
Emergency Response Operations (STEReO) project, observes fire-response
professionals preparing to use an unmanned aircraft system (UAS) – or drone –
to conduct a prescribed burn in Bankhead National Forest, Alabama, in March
2022. The STEReO team’s prototype technology – the yellow UAS pilot’s kit
pictured here – brings drone pilots greater awareness of other flights
happening nearby, allowing them to safely and efficiently participate in fire
response operations. Credits:
NASA
Aerial Ignition: Lighting Friendly Fires
In March, STEReO
team members observed U.S. Forest Service personnel working at prescribed burns
in eight national forests across Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi. These
intentional fires are a land management strategy used to reduce the amount of
vegetation available for unintentional fires to burn. They’re started with
aerial-ignition platforms, drones that precisely drop small incendiary balls
while under the control of a remote pilot. Forest Service trainees were
learning the ropes.
The NASA team brought four of their
UASP-kits to these events, taught Forest Service personnel how to operate them,
and then observed as the firefighters used the technology during two weeks of
real-world missions.
The prescribed burns provide a way to
practice for fire emergencies. But they also come with their own challenges,
which STEReO can help meet. Unlike wildfire disaster responses, prescribed
burns don’t have the protections offered by a closed-off airspace meant to keep
other aircraft out of the way. That means anyone can fly through the area.
STEReO’s UASP-kit gives operators greater awareness of nearby aircraft, making
it safer to conduct these helpful kinds of burns.
From this field work, NASA researchers
gathered important data and feedback from fire teams’ extended use of STEReO’s
concepts in a real-world setting.
“It was great to see them incorporate the
UASP-kit into their workflows and hear how it affects their situational
awareness,” said Joey Mercer, STEReO’s principal investigator at NASA’s Ames
Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, where the project is led. “Any
time spent in the field with firefighters is super valuable – we get to see
more of their world and see who we’re building this technology for.”
Updating
the UASP-kit
On the other side of the country, in early
May, STEReO researchers joined a training course related to aerial firefighting
hosted by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE).
In Redding, California, trainees were learning to direct the intense airspace
activity of an emergency response, with numerous aircraft flying over a
simulated fire. On the ground, NASA’s STEReO team was testing new features of
their UASP-kit.
While no drones were flown that day, STEReO team
members played the role of the UAS pilot and tested how the UASP-kit performed
with their latest software in this complex environment.
“We were able to see right away if a new
feature was working well, or if it needed immediate attention from our team’s
software engineers,” said Mercer. “This rapid prototyping approach, when
validated in these operational settings, is the fastest way for us to be sure
we’re giving these users the capabilities they need.”
Looking
Ahead
As fire season progresses, the STEReO team
will keep learning how to improve the UASP-kit from their partners on the front
lines of wildfires. Forest Service and CAL FIRE staff will continue to operate
the UASP-kits throughout this fire season, giving the STEReO team many
opportunities to observe how drone operators use their technology during
wildfire disaster responses.
STEReO
is led by NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley in
collaboration with two other NASA centers: Langley Research Center in Hampton,
Virginia, and Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio. STEReO’s partners range
from federal agencies to city and state fire departments, utilities, and
private companies. The work is a concept study under NASA’s Convergent
Aeronautics Solutions project.
Source: Field
Tests Help Prepare NASA Tech for Fire Season | NASA
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