Company:Aurora Flight Sciences

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Aurora Flight Sciences
IndustryAerospace manufacturer
Founded1989
FounderJohn S. Langford III
Headquarters
Manassas, VA
,
USA
Number of locations
4
ProductsUnmanned aerial vehicles
Number of employees
468[1]
ParentBoeing
Websitehttp://www.aurora.aero

Aurora Flight Sciences is an American aviation and aeronautics research subsidiary of Boeing which primarily specializes in the design and construction of special-purpose Unmanned aerial vehicles. Aurora has been established for 20+ years and their headquarters is at the Manassas Airport in Manassas, VA.

History

The company was founded in Alexandria, Virginia, in 1989 as a follow on to the MIT Daedalus Project. The first aircraft was the Perseus proof of concept (POC) built for NASA which first flew in 1991 at NASA Dryden. It was followed by two Perseus As and one Perseus B which were all built for NASA's ERAST program. A twin engine Theseus was also built.

In 1995 Aurora joined the Global Hawk team and continues to build composite fuselage components and tail assemblies of the RQ-4 for Northrop Grumman and the United States Air Force.

Aurora has been involved in several NASA programs studying how to fly an aircraft on the planet Mars. A demonstration aircraft was flown in 2002 from an altitude of 100,000' to simulate the low density of the martian atmosphere.

Aurora has developed its own line of small vertical take-off UAVs known as GoldenEye. The third variant of this family, the GoldenEye-80, was first flown publicly at AUVSI's 2009 Unmanned Systems North America trade show.

Aurora has four facilities that each have their own focus. Corporate Headquarters and Engineering are in Manassas, VA. A manufacturing center was opened in Fairmont, WV in 1994. It was moved to Bridgeport, WV in 2000. Another manufacturing facility was opened in Starkville, MS in 2005. In 2007 it was moved to the nearby Golden Triangle Regional Airport in Columbus, MS. A research and development center was opened in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 2005 where Aurora now develops a line of micro air vehicles.

On October 5, 2017 Boeing announced that it would be acquiring Aurora Flight Sciences.[2]

In April 2018, as DARPA allowed Aurora to transition government-funded technology for commercial applications, the tilt-wing XV-24A Lightning Strike and its distributed propulsion could be reused for an electric commercial air taxi along its lift-and-cruise prototype with vertical flight rotors and cruise fixed propellers, unveiled in 2017. Aurora plans multiple demonstrators controlled centrally by 2020 and a piloted air taxi by 2023 with autonomy later depending on regulation.[3]

Aircraft produced

  • Perseus POC
  • Perseus A
  • Theseus
  • Perseus B
  • Chiron
  • MarsFlyer[4]
  • GoldenEye 100
  • GoldenEye 50[5]
  • GoldenEye 80[6]
  • Excalibur[7]
  • Centaur Optionally-Piloted Aircraft (OPA)
  • Orion
  • SunLight Eagle
  • Odysseus
  • Skate SUAS
  • Tactical Autonomous Aerial Logistics System (TALOS)
    • H-6U Unmanned Little Bird
    • Bell 206
    • UH-1H UAV

Proposal

Aurora LightningStrike VTOL X-Plane

References

External links