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PRESS RELEASE
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BAE Systems selected by DARPA to progress revolutionary aircraft design and testing
Tuesday, 7 September 2021

BAE Systems will progress the design and testing of revolutionary flow control technologies that could deliver significant operational enhancements to tomorrow's warfighters.

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) awarded the contract to BAE Systems to design a full scale demonstrator concept with Active Flow Control at its core. The aircraft's ability to maneouvre in flight without conventional flight control surfaces will enable improved performance, maintainability, and survivability.

The contract award forms part of DARPA's Control of Revolutionary Aircraft with Novel Effectors (CRANE) project, which intends to inject Active Flow Control technology early into the aircraft design process to demonstrate significant efficiency benefits, as well as improvements to aircraft cost, weight, performance, and reliability.

BAE Systems' role in Project CRANE builds on its innovation demonstrated through MAGMA in 2019, where a subscale aircraft was successfully maneouvred in flight using supersonically blown air and Active Flow Control technologies for the first time in aviation history.

Tom Fillingham, Senior Vice President – US Programs, BAE Systems Air said, "BAE Systems has been at the forefront of digital design for more than 20 years. This award enables us to progress Active Flow Control and our digital engineering capabilities at full scale, in collaboration with DARPA and the University of Manchester in the UK. Since our groundbreaking MAGMA trials, our engineers across the UK, US, and Australia have continued to innovate to identify improvements in the aircraft digital design process to deliver military value and operational advantages to the warfighter."

As military aircraft confront increasingly contested and sophisticated threat environments, Active Flow Control offers potential military benefits that could deliver operational advantage in the battlespace. Active Flow Control technologies can supplement or replace conventional moveable control surfaces to improve the performance of an aircraft at various points in the flight regime, as well as reduce mass and volume compared to aircraft with conventional controls to enable greater payloads and greater flexibility to the operator.

The contract will see BAE Systems mature design, integration, and de-risking activities, including wind tunnel testing at its facilities in the North West of England in 2022. This innovative work will inform future phases of the CRANE program, including the concept design activity.

Contact details from our directory:
BAE Systems Electronic Components
DARPA Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Airframer, Research/Consulting Services, Technical/Eng/Scientific Studies
BAE Systems Air Additive Manufacturing, Aircraft Structural Components, Computer-aided Engineering, Wind Tunnels, Surveillance/Air Defense Radar
Related directory sectors:
Active Electronic Components