Friday, 12 February 2016

High-altitude drones could eliminate phone signal black spots


A drone
Hello? This is your drone speaking
Richard Newstead/Getty
Can you hear me now? Drones could soon be calling home using the cellphone network. The tech could also one day eliminate signal black spots for phone users.
Small drones can usually only be controlled over line-of-sight distances, so to cover a wide area an operator needs several dedicated communication stations along the flightpath – or expensive satellite links. HAPlink (high altitude platform link) developed by Roke Manor Research in Hampshire, UK, gets around this by using the mobile phone infrastructure. By piggy-backing onto an existing network, a drone can fly over long distances without the need to set up new connections.
HAPlink communicates with cell phone masts up to 50 kilometres away. It uses a beamforming antenna, which focuses a signal in a narrow beam rather than emitting it equally in all directions. This is the first beamforming system to work with standard 3G or 4G phone signals, plugging into the antenna port of a standard 4G data card.
The aim is to develop a communications system for a solar-powered, high-altitude drone that can stay in the air for weeks at a time, says Bob Dalgleish at Roke Manor.

Pocket size

But it could also be a boon for mobile phone users. The system’s long range means it can provide a phone signal to areas normally considered black spots. Dalgleish says the technology could easily turn a high-altitude drone into a “base station in the sky”, providing wide area coverage.
Image result wey dey for dronesHAPlink weighs about a kilo and its antenna array is about 30 centimetres across. At this size it could be mounted onto vehicles, boosting phone coverage for passengers. But if the device can be shrunk to pocket size, a portable HAPlink could be even carried around with you, says Dalgleish.
Test flights using the tech are planned for 2017. In the meantime, Roke will need to demonstrate that it is safe to use cell towers to control drones. Regulators could be reluctant to give the go ahead because towers sometimes go down, says drone specialist Gary Mortimer at website sUAS News. “If there is a particularly interesting edition of Coronation Street and a Twitter storm lowers link speeds, will the drone be home in time for tea?”

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