University of Petroleum and Energy Studies (UPES) is developing a payload prototype for military aircraft C-130 J Super Hercules with the help of a research grant of 40,000 US Dollars from Lockheed Martin.
The Payload will be used towards improved Humanitarian Aid Support, Disaster Relief Operations, Medical Evacuation and Environmental / Weather missions.
The payload being developed by UPES will help in ensuring prompt response during extreme situations and saving initial response time which is usually spent in setting up working head-quarters from where relief teams can operate in case of a disaster occurrence.
"We are extremely proud of this achievement by our students, supported by our faculty members. This is a fitting testimony of the technical competencies developed by the students during the course of their studies, our focus on research and development and industry-academia interface," said CEO and President UPES, Utpal Ghosh.
Currently, in relief operations during disaster situations facilities like water purification system, sanitation facilities, electricity and powerhouse etc. are set up separately, which eats up significant amount of crucial 'golden hours' i.e first 72 hours after a disaster occurrence.
The payload being developed by UPES team will help in saving considerable set-up time when every second counts.
"In disaster situations and during relief operations a lot of initial response time is spent in setting up working head-quarters from where relief teams can operate. Our winning payload structure and its internal architecture has been developed to reduce initial response time as much as possible, technologically," said Dean College of Engineering Studies (CoES) at UPES, Dr. Kamal Bansal.
"We aim to finish this project by next year and look forward to developing ideal head-quarters for large scale relief operations," adds Bansal.
The team developing the prototype is backed by Technology giants Lockheed Martin, Tata Advanced Systems, DRDO, IAF officials and NDRF. This is also being developed keeping in mind the in-depth understanding of ground-zero realities to make it suitable for scenarios like air drop and long storage period.
Additionally, UPES students have been part of Indian and global missions and competitions in the past.
Smiti Maini, a student of 2006-2010 aerospace engineering batch at UPES, was part of mission control team for the launch of India's Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) in November 2013 and Mars Orbit Insertion in September 2014.
She worked on spacecraft control systems design, analysis and simulation, and also designed the thruster failure detection, isolation and reconfiguration (TFDIR) for autonomous functioning of the spacecraft.
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