|
For release October 26, 2006
DIRECTOR, AF CONTROL SCIENCE CENTER LEADS
SEMINAR AT UT SPACE INSTITUTE
Dr. Siva S. Banda, a leading authority on
aerospace control science, predicted major aerospace control
challenges “in the near future” during a recent visit to The
University of Tennessee Space Institute.
Dr. Banda, Director of the Control Science Center of Excellence,
U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base, toured UTSI’s Flight Research Center and later presented a
seminar titled “Aerospace Controls: The Way Forward.”
Banda stressed the inter-disciplinary challenges faced by the
“controls community” in the aerospace arena where he expects
“increased complexities.”
“We will address control science issues and research covering a
broad range of air and space vehicles,” he said. These
challenges will include unmanned and micro air vehicles,
reusable space launch vehicles, air-breathing propulsion
engines, autonomous air refueling, structural, and aerodynamic
flow control challenges, Banda said. For instance, he commented
that micro air vehicles have a problem avoiding collisions with
wires.
“Dr. Banda is a member of the National Academy of Engineering in
the United States, which in my opinion is one of the highest
honors that a technical person can receive,” Dr. Donald C.
Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief operating officer
of the Institute, said in introducing the speaker. “President
Bush recently awarded him the Presidential Meritorious Rank
Award. We are extremely fortunate to have him at the Space
Institute.”
Rick Peters, executive director of Arnold Engineering
Development Center, joined Banda and Daniel for lunch and then
accompanied Banda on a tour of AEDC. Peters once worked with
Banda in the Air Force Research Laboratory.
Dr. Stephen Corda, head of UTSI’s Aviation Systems program,
discussed efforts to elevate this fast-growing academic program
while also increasing research opportunities.
“We don’t teach students how to fly or how to become test
pilots,” Corda said. “Our focus is on flight test engineering
and research.” (Some of the students in the program are test
pilots as are Corda and Assistant Research Professor Rich
Ranaudo.) Several graduates of the program are astronauts.
Corda cited varied research proposals and projects, including
some proposed in theses by graduate students such as a design of
a Mars airplane.
Daniel mentioned the possibility of UTSI’s future collaboration
with Middle Tennessee State University, where students are
taught flying. He also cited the Institute’s plans to build a
larger flight research center at the Tullahoma airport.
“We’re pushing hard for this,” Daniel said. “It is my number one
priority.” He said he hopes private gifts will supplement state
funding for the estimated $11 million facility, which he sees as
“a catalyst for economic development in this area.”
Banda’s current research efforts focus on cooperative control of
multiple unmanned air vehicles, guidance and control of
access-to-space vehicles, and aerodynamic flow control. He is a
recipient of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers (IEEE) Control Systems Technology Award and is a
Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
(AIAA) and IEEE.
Ranaudo discussed the many useful applications of UTSI’s
Variable Stability Navions in simulating various conditions,
particularly useful in his icing short courses to mimic icing
conditions. Dr. George Masters, a former test pilot instructor
at Patuxent River and member of UTSI’s theses committee, also
discussed a proposal for design, analysis, and optimization of
aircraft and aircraft flight control systems.

Research Assistant Professor Rich
Ranaudo, left, makes a point about one of UTSI’s
airplanes while accompanying Assistant Professor
Bruce Whitehead, Dr. Silva Banda, and Dr. Donald C.
Daniel on a tour of the hangar at the Institute’s
Flight Research Center at Tullahoma Airport.
-UTSI Photo
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
|