Dolphins Play with Robotic Seaplane

The University of Michigan's Aerospace Engineering Department and Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratories became involved in an unusual collaboration last year to build an unmanned aircraft that could meet the requirements of the Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency's persistent ocean surveillance program. In just eight months they designed, built and successfully flight-tested a tiny unmanned seaplane called the Flying Fish, able to take off, fly and land autonomously in moderate seas.
(Image credit: University of Michigan)

It's a bird, it's a plane -- no, it's the Flying Fish, a new unmanned seaplane developed at the University of Michigan that has demonstrated the ability to take off, fly and land autonomously in moderate seas some 6 feet high.

Researchers at U-M's Aerospace Engineering Department and its Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratories who designed and built the new unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), which they named the Flying Fish, think it is the first UAV that can take off and land on water all by itself.

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