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| American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. See-and-Avoid Technologies and Operations for Remotely Operated Aircraft (ROA) in Civil Airspace Workshop. (Proceedings) Arlington, VA: AIAA, 2000. A collection of nine technical papers; 82 pages; ISBN 1-56347-475-1. Armitage, Sir Michael. Unmanned Aircraft (Brassey's Air Power: Aircraft, Weapon Systems and Technology series, Volume 3). London: Brassey's Defence Publishers, 1988. 137pp. Origins of UAVs traced from World War I to the Aquila program (late 1980s). Association of Old Crows. Proceedings of the UAV/UCAV Payloads Conference: Payloads and Tomorrow's Battlespace. Washington: Association of Old Crows, 1998. 400pp. Association of Unmanned Vehicle Systems International. AUVSI Membership Directory, 1996-97. Washington: AUVSI, 1996. 130pp. Members listed by name and by organization, and corporate members profiled; updated annually. Association of Unmanned Vehicle Systems International. AUVSI '98 Proceedings. Washington: AUVSI, 1998. 938pp. Collection of papers and addresses presented at AUVSI's annual symposium and exhibition; previous years' proceedings also published. Proceedings of subsequent AUVSI annual symposiums are available in CD format, and previous years in hardcopy, from AUVSI. Bloom, Ursala. He Lit the Lamp: A Biography of Professor A. M. Low. Burke. London. 1958. 213pp. Bone, Elizabeth and Bolkcom, Christopher. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Background and Issues for Congress. Washington/Congressional Research Service. RL31872. 25 Apr 2003. 48 pp. Summary of U.S. military UAV programs in 2002. Available on FAS Web. Botzum, Richard A. 50 Years of Target Drone Aircraft. Newbury Park, CA: Northrop, 1985. Callero, Monti. Assessment of Nonlethal Unmanned Aerial Vehicles for Integration with Combat Aviation Missions, DB-120-A, RAND, Santa Monica, CA, 1995. 59 pp. Examines three ways (associated, dedicated, and coupled) to integrate UAVs into Army operations and elaborates on the Army's "Bird Dog" concept. Availability: (310) 451-7002 or order@rand.org. Davenport, William Wyatt. Gyro! The Life and Times of Lawrence Sperry. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. 1978. ISBN: 0684157934. Defense Marketing Services. Unmanned Vehicles Forecast. Newtown, CT: Forecast International/DMS, 1990 (updated quarterly). Forecast of UAV sales by system over next 10 years, with sections on UGVs and demining equipment, in binder format with partial updates each quarter; successor to DMS' RPVs/Drones/Targets Worldwide Market Study and Forecast (1987); POC is Larry Dickerson @ (203) 426-0800, or www.forecast1.com. Donaldson, Peter, ed. Shephard's Unmanned Vehicles Handbook. 1998 ed. Burnham, Bucks, England: The Shephard Press, 1997. 112pp. Description of worldwide UAV requirements; unmanned air, land, and underwater vehicle and payload specifications; and alphabetical suppliers and products guide. Fahlstrom, Paul, and Dr.Thomas Gleason. Introduction to UAV Systems. 2nd ed. Columbia, MD: UAV Systems, Inc., 1998. 250pp. Semitechnical description of the functional parts (air vehicle, payload, data link, control, launch and recovery) common to all UAVs and the advantages and disadvantages of various approaches in each of these areas. Editors of Jane's Information Group. Jane's Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and Targets, 1995-96. French UAVs (in French), epervier.sudluberon.free.fr/techniques/drones.htm Gerken, Louis S. UAVUnmanned Aerial Vehicle. Chula Vista, CA: American Scientific Co., 1991. Glausier, Charles A. Desert Storm UAV Lessons Learned Data Base. Washington: Booz, Allen & Hamilton, Inc., Mar 1992. 58 pp. Tables of Pioneer missions and mishaps. Available from DTIC. Gordon, Yefim. Soviet/Russian Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. Midland Publishing, Hinckley, England. 2005. ISBN: 1857801938 Hall, James J. American Kamikaze: The First Remotely Piloted Combat Aircraft. DiVerre Media, Inc.. Orlando, FL. 2004. 2nd edition (first in 1988). Holder, Bill. Unmanned Air Vehicles: An Illustrated Study of UAVs. ISBN: 0764315005. Jones, Capt. Robert F. The King's Missiles. JP 3-55.1, Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, 27 Aug 93. JCS. Washington. 1997. Available through Joint Electronic Library, Joint Doctrine Division, J7, 7000 Joint Staff Pentagon, Washington, DC 20318-7000 Kirk, Kevin M. and Howard, Richard M. Developing a Better Naval Unmanned Aerial Vehicle. Alexandria, VA: Center for Naval Analyses, 1998. 34 pages. Labs, Eric J., et al. Options for Enhancing the Department of Defense's Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Programs. Washington: Congressional Budget Office, 1998. 64pp. Review of U.S. DoD UAV programs from Pioneer to Global Hawk/DarkStar, their potential military uses, and five options for reducing capabilities overlap and employment conflicts among these programs. Leonard, Robert S. and Jeffrey A. Drezner. Global Hawk and DarkStar: HAE UAV ACTD Program Description and Comparative Analysis. RAND, Santa Monica, CA. 2002. ISBN: 0833031120. Marine Corps Intelligence Activity. Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Recognition Guide (MCIA-1361-001-00). Washington, DC. Nov, 2000. Caveated as For Official Use Only. Contains summarized descriptions of 100 non-US UAVs from 35 countries. McComb, Gordon. Robot Builders Sourcebook. McGraw-Hill, New York. 2003. Components for your UAV, from actuators to wheels. See also Robot Builders Bonanza, same author. Munson, Kenneth, ed. Jane's Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and Targets. Issue Twelve, Aug 1999. United Kingdom: 1999. 690 pp. History, characteristics, and performance of current worldwide UAVs. Munson, Kenneth. World Unmanned Aircraft. London: Jane's Publishing Co. Ltd. 1988. 221 pp. National Research Council. Uninhabited Air Vehicles. Washington: National Academy Press, 2000. 108 pp. Identifies long-term research opportunities for supporting the development of UAV-related technologies (aerodynamics, structures, propulsion, power, and control) to improve the performance and reliability and lower the cost of generation-after-next UAVs. Newcome, Laurence R. Unmanned Aviation: A Brief History of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. AIAA, Reston, VA. 2004. ISBN: 1563476444. Office of Naval Research. Technologies for Rapid Response, August 1997, ONR, Washington, DC, 1997. c.100 pp. (aka, "Blue Book") Compilation of single page summaries of systems under development by the ONR and their costs, including Sender and Dragon Drone UAVs, the Low Cost Intervention UUV (LCIUUV), and the Unmanned Surface Vehicle for Surveillance & Reconnaissance, along with project rankings by the Fleet and Fleet Marine Forces. Availability: ONR, 800 N. Quincy St., Arlington, VA. Peebles, Curtis. Dark Eagles: A History of Top Secret U.S. Aircraft Programs. Presidio Press, Novato, CA. 1995. Discusses Amber and HALSOL and their children. Reed, Sidney G., Richard van Atta, Seymour J. Deitchman. DARPA Technical Accomplishments: An Historical Review of Selected DARPA Projects, Volume I. IDA, Arlington, VA. Feb 1990. IDA Paper P-2192. Chapter XXVIII describes DARPA's mini-UAV projects from the Vietnam War to 1990. Shaker, Steven M. and Alan R. Wise. War without Men: Robots on the Future Battlefield. Pergamon-Brassey's, Washington, DC. 1988. ISBN 9780080342160. The Shephard Group. Unmanned Vehicles Handbook. Williams Press, Berkshire, UK. 2005. ISSN 1365-6546. 184 pages. Annual guide to unmanned aircraft (each with photo), aerial targets, payloads, and suppliers. The Shephard Group. UV 2000 Conference Proceedings. Jul 2000 edition, 2 volumes. Burnham, Bucks, England: The Shephard Press, 2000. Compilation of conference briefing viewgraphs. Annual publication, available from The Shephard Group. Siuru, Bill. Planes without Pilots: Advances in Unmanned Flight. Tab Books. Blue Ridge Summit, PA. 1991. 76 pages. Sommor, G., et al. The Global Hawk Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Acquisition Process: A Summary of Phase I Experience. MR-809-DARPA. Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1997. Taylor, John W. R. ed. Jane's Pocket Book of RPVs: Robot Aircraft Today. London: MacDonald & Janes, 1977. Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical (corporate brochure). A History of Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical, its Aircraft and UAVs. San Diego: Teledyne Ryan, 1992. 13pp. Thirtle, Michael R., Robert V. Johnson, and John L. Birkler. The Predator ACTD: A Case Study for Transition Planning to the Formal Acquisition Process. MR-899-OSD. Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 1997. 86pp. Examination of lessons learned from the Predator ACTD and their potential application to other ACTD programs. UAV Human Factors Guidelines. United States Air Force. The U.S. Air Forve Remotely Piloted Aircraft and Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Strategic Vision. 2005. 34pp. United States Army. Field manual (Interim) FMI 3-04.155, Army Unmanned Aircraft System Operations. HQ USA. Apr 2006. 183pp. United States. Dept. of Defense. Annual Report: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). 1995 ed. Washington: Defense Airborne Reconnaissance Office, 1995. 42pp. First annual report on status and accomplishments of US DoD UAV programs (Pioneer, Hunter, Predator, Global Hawk, and DarkStar) during FY 1995. United States. Dept. of Defense. DoD Joint UAV Program Master Plan. Washington: Office of the Secretary of Defense, 1988. 48 pp. Initial "master plan" directed by Title IV, Public Law 100-180, in the FY88 defense budget, which placed all UAV development under a joint program office. United States. Dept. of Defense. FMFM 3-22-1: UAV Company Operations. United States. Dept. of Defense. JP 3-55.1: Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. Washington: Joint Chiefs of Staff/J7, 1993. 29pp. Military guidance for employing UAVs in support of joint operations, including command and control, tasking, airspace control, mission planning and conduct, and Close-Range and Short-Range UAV system descriptions; to be reissued in late 1998. United States. Dept. of Defense. 1997 Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Overview. Washington: Program Executive Office (Cruise missiles and Joint Unmanned Aerial Vehicles), 1997. 94pp. Snapshot of Joint UAV Program Office activities as of Nov 97, to include Pioneer, Hunter, Predator, Outrider, Pointer, Exdrone, Tactical Control System, and VTOL Demonstration programs. United States. Dept. of Defense. OSD Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Roadmap, 2000-2025. Apr 2001. Washington: Office of the Secretary of Defense (Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics), 2001. 120 pp. Overview of current DoD UAV programs with a focus on theater requirements and emerging technologies for use in UAVs over the coming 25 years; prepared by Adroit Systems, Inc. United States. Dept. of Defense. Predator System Familiarization Guide. Washington: Defense Airborne Reconnaissance Office, 1996. 19pp. Introduction to Predator system, mission characteristics, and tasking process for unified command users; prepared by TASC. United States. Dept. of Defense. UAV Annual Report FY 1996. 1996 ed. Washington: Defense Airborne Reconnaissance Office, 1996. 44pp. Second annual report on status and accomplishments of US DoD UAV programs (Outrider, Pioneer, Hunter, Predator, Global Hawk, and DarkStar) during FY 1996. United States. Dept. of Defense. UAV Annual Report FY 1997. 1997 ed. Washington: Defense Airborne Reconnaissance Office, 1997. 44pp. Third annual report on status and accomplishments of US DoD UAV programs (Outrider, Pioneer, Hunter, Predator, Global Hawk, and DarkStar) during FY 1997. United States. Dept. of Defense. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles 1994 Master Plan. 6th ed. Washington: Program Executive Office (Cruise Missiles and Joint Unmanned Aerial Vehicles), 1994. 95pp. Sixth in series of annual Congressionally mandated reports, begun in 1988; succeeded by the 1997 Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Overview. United States. Federal Aviation Administration. FAA UAS Policy Memo 05-01, Unmanned Aircraft Systems Operations in the U.S. National Airspace System - Interim Operational Approval Guidance. Washington: FAA, Sep 2005. 9pp. United States. Government Accounting Office. Aquila Remotely Piloted Vehicle: Its Potential Battlefield Contribution Still in Doubt. GAO/NSIAD-88-19. Washington: GAO, Oct 1987. 41pp. Aquila assessment. United States Government Accounting Office. Nonproliferation: Improvements Needed to Better Control Technology Exports for Cruise Missiles and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. GAO-04-175. GAO, Washington, DC. Jan 2004. 59 pages. Available from www.gao.gov or 202-512-6000. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Assessment of DoD's Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Master Plan. GAO/NSIAD-89-41BR. Washington: GAO, Dec 1988. 13pp. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: DOD's Demonstration Approach Has Improved Project Outcomes. GAO/NSIAD-99-33. Washington: GAO, Aug 1999. 15pp. ACTDs work for UAVs. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: High Altitude Endurance Aircraft Unlikely to Meet Price Goals. GAO/NSIAD-99-29. Washington: GAO, Nov 1998. 10pp. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Improved Strategic and Acquisition Planning Can Help Address Emerging Challenges. GAO-05-395T. Washington, DC. 9 Mar 2005. Order from www.gao.gov, or 202-512-6000. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Maneuver System Schedule Includes Unnecessary Risk. GAO/NSIAD-95-161. Washington: GAO, Sep 1995. 15pp. Tactical UAV assessment. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Medium Range System Components Do Not Fit. GAO/NSIAD-91-2. Washington: GAO, Mar 1991. 32pp. ATARS on Navy/Air Force BQM-145 (MR-UAV) assessment. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: No More Hunter Systems Should Be Bought Until Problems Are Fixed. GAO/NSIAD-95-52. Washington: GAO, Mar 1995. 18pp. Hunter assessment. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Outrider Demonstrations Will Be Inadequate to Justify Further Production. GAO/NSIAD-97-153. Washington: GAO, Sep 1997. 20pp. Outrider assessment. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Performance of Short-Range System Still in Question. GAO/NSIAD-94-65. Washington: GAO, Dec 1993. 17pp. Hunter assessment. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Progress of the Global Hawk Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration. GAO/NSIAD-00-78. Washington: GAO, Apr 2000. 14 pp. Estimated unit flyaway price for a Global Hawk rose from $14.8M in Jul 1998 to $15.3M in Jul 1999, vice the program's requirement of a $10M UFP in FY94. United States. Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Realistic Testing Needed Before Production of Short-Range System. GAO/NSIAD-90-234. Washington: GAO, Sep 1990. 29pp. Hunter assessment. United States Government Accounting Office. Unmanned Aircraft Systems: DoD Needs to More Effectively Promote Interoperability and Improve Performance Assessments. GAO-06-49. GAO, Washington, DC. Dec 2005. 36 pages. Available from www.gao.gov or 202-512-6000. Valpolini, Paulo. Meteor. ED.A.I., Florence, Italy. 2001. 79 pages. Italian/English history of Italy's leading UA manufacturer, the Meteor Company. Van Blyenburg, Peter and Philip Butterworth-Hayes. UAV Systems: The Global Perspective. Blyenburg & Co., Paris, France. 2005. 200 pages. Annual worldwide almanac of unmanned aviation activities by country and organization. Published in 2003 as UAVs-A Vision of the Future and in 2004 as UAVs: A Global Perspective. Wagner, William, and William P. Sloan. Fireflies and Other UAVs. Arlington, TX: Aerofax, 1992. 205pp. History of Teledyne Ryan's UAV programs from the Vietnam War to 1992; sequel to Wagner's Lightning Bugs and Other Reconnaissance Drones, 1982. Wagner, William. Lightning Bugs and Other Reconnaissance Drones. Fallbrook, CA: Aero Publishers, 1982. 222pp. History of Teledyne Ryan's RPV programs from the late 1940's to the end of the Vietnam War. Werrell, Kenneth P. Evolution of the Cruise Missile. Washington: Air University Press, 1985. 289 pp. Wireless Data Link Resource List at www.robotics.com Worch, P., et al. UAV Technologies and Combat Operations. SAB-TR-96-01. Washington: Department of the Air Force, AF/SB, Dec 1996. 580pp. (2 volumes). Examination of key technologies and potential missions for USAF UAVs in the future; roadmap for developing a SEAD-capable UAV program developed. Yenne, Bill. Attack of the Drones: A History of Unmanned Aerial Combat. 2004. ISBN: 0760318255. |
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