Supersonic Drones Can Out manoeuvre Humans. Why Do We Need Pilots?

The F‐16 is familiar to airplane enthusiasts as the nimble American jet fighter, in service since the 1970s, with a nose like a heron with a severe under bite. Last week saw the maiden flight of the QF‐16, which is just an F‐16 with one modification: no pilot inside. Drones are everywhere these days, from battlefields to toy stores and music videos, but most are slow, relatively underpowered, and valuable only because they can stay in the air for long periods of time or because they’re cheap. This QF‐16, on the other hand, is a drone with an after burner that can fly at one‐and‐a‐half times the speed of sound. In its first test flight from Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida, the plane executed a barrel roll as well as a “split S” ‐ a move in which the plane flips over onto its back and then does half a loop so it ends up headed, right way up, in the opposite direction ‐ before executing a perfect landing back at the base.

Source: Economic Times


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