An aircraft includes a fuselage, a wing, a ducted fan and a controller. The wing and the ducted fan are coupled to the fuselage. The controller is operable to control the aircraft in a vertical flight mode, a horizontal flight mode, and transition the aircraft from the vertical flight mode to the ho
An aircraft includes a fuselage, a wing, a ducted fan and a controller. The wing and the ducted fan are coupled to the fuselage. The controller is operable to control the aircraft in a vertical flight mode, a horizontal flight mode, and transition the aircraft from the vertical flight mode to the horizontal flight mode.
대표청구항▼
1. An aircraft, comprising: a fuselage having a nose end and a second, opposing end defined as a tail end, a forward direction being defined as towards the nose end of the fuselage and an aft direction being defined as opposite to the forward direction;a wing coupled to the fuselage between the nose
1. An aircraft, comprising: a fuselage having a nose end and a second, opposing end defined as a tail end, a forward direction being defined as towards the nose end of the fuselage and an aft direction being defined as opposite to the forward direction;a wing coupled to the fuselage between the nose end and the tail end;a propulsion unit coupled to the fuselage and disposed aft of a center of gravity of the aircraft; anda controller operable to control the aircraft in: a vertical flight mode in which a ground speed of the aircraft is below a first threshold,a horizontal flight mode in which a sensed airspeed of the aircraft is above a second threshold, anda transition flight mode in which the aircraft transitions from the vertical flight mode to the horizontal flight mode, whereinin the transition flight mode, the controller is operable to: orient the aircraft into a wind based on trajectory commands by comparing sensor inputs to a desired orientation, andaccelerate the aircraft until the sensed airspeed exceeds a stall speed of the aircraft by a margin, andthe controller is operable to transition the aircraft from the vertical flight mode to the horizontal flight mode while maintaining altitude of the aircraft within 100 ft throughout the transition flight mode. 2. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein the propulsion unit is disposed aft of a trailing edge of the wing. 3. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein the propulsion unit is operable to provide directed thrust. 4. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein in the vertical flight mode, a first lifting force generated by the propulsion unit is greater than a second lifting force generated by the wing. 5. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein in the horizontal flight mode, a second lifting force generated by the wing is greater than a first lifting force generated by the propulsion unit. 6. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein the first threshold is a prescribed hover threshold speed. 7. The aircraft of claim 6, wherein the second threshold is at least 125% of the stall speed of the aircraft. 8. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein in the transition flight mode, the controller is operable to determine a ground speed acceleration rate and accelerate the aircraft at the ground speed acceleration rate until the sensed airspeed exceeds the stall speed by the margin. 9. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein the propulsion unit includes a ducted fan. 10. The aircraft of claim 2, wherein the propulsion unit includes a plurality of control vanes to provide directed thrust. 11. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein the controller is operable to generate commands for pitch, speed and roll based at least in part on sensory input values for speed, position and altitude. 12. The aircraft of claim 11, wherein the controller is operable to generate the commands for pitch, speed and roll based at least in part on the trajectory commands. 13. The aircraft of claim 11, wherein the trajectory commands include acceleration and courseline heading commands. 14. The aircraft of claim 11, wherein the controller is operable to determine Euler angle errors based on the sensory input values and the trajectory commands. 15. The aircraft of claim 14, wherein the controller is operable to determine body axis angle errors based on the Euler angle errors. 16. The aircraft of claim 15, wherein the controller is operable to direct the thrust of the propulsion unit based on the body axis angle errors. 17. The aircraft of claim 1, wherein the controller is operable to transition the aircraft from the horizontal flight mode to the vertical flight mode while maintaining altitude of the aircraft within 100 ft throughout the transition. 18. The aircraft of claim 1, further comprising spoilers, wherein the controller is operable to deploy the spoilers in a transition from the horizontal flight mode to the vertical flight mode. 19. A method of transitioning an aircraft that includes a fuselage, a propulsion unit and a wing, wherein the fuselage includes a nose end and a second, opposing end defined as a tail end, a forward direction is defined as towards the nose end of the fuselage, an aft direction is defined as opposite to the forward direction, the propulsion unit is coupled to the fuselage and disposed aft of a center of gravity of the aircraft, and the wing is coupled to the fuselage, the method comprising using a controller to run a flight control algorithm to: fly the aircraft in a vertical flight mode in which a ground speed of the aircraft is below a first threshold;transition the aircraft from the vertical flight mode to a horizontal flight mode while maintaining altitude of the aircraft within 100 ft throughout the transition, the transition including: orienting the aircraft into a wind based on trajectory commands by comparing sensor inputs to a desired orientation,adjusting a power output of the propulsion unit and a pitching moment of the aircraft to accelerate the aircraft until a sensed airspeed exceeds a stall speed of the aircraft by a margin; andfly the aircraft in the horizontal flight mode in which the sensed airspeed is above a second threshold. 20. The method of claim 19, wherein the propulsion unit includes a ducted fan. 21. The method of claim 20, wherein the propulsion unit includes a plurality of control vanes to provide directed thrust, andthe adjusting includes adjusting a position of the control vanes. 22. The method of claim 19, further comprising determining commands for pitch, speed and roll based at least in part on sensory input values for speed, position and altitude. 23. The method of claim 22, wherein the determining the commands for pitch, speed and roll is based at least in part on the trajectory commands. 24. The method of claim 23, wherein the trajectory commands include acceleration and courseline heading commands. 25. The method of claim 23, further comprising determining Euler angle errors based on the sensory input values and the trajectory commands. 26. The method of claim 25, further comprising determining body axis angle errors based on the Euler angle errors. 27. The method of claim 26, further comprising directing the thrust of the propulsion unit based on the body axis angle errors. 28. The method of claim 21, further comprising adjusting, after the flying the aircraft in a horizontal flight, the output power of the propulsion unit and pitch moment of the control vanes to decelerate the aircraft in the horizontal direction. 29. The method of claim 19, further comprising, during the adjusting, maintaining trim of the aircraft at an angle of attack between zero degrees and ninety degrees.
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이 특허에 인용된 특허 (3)
Wainfan Barnaby, Airplane with variable-incidence wing.
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