Proceedings

Find matching any: Reset
Thomas, A.D
Hayhurst, K
Sunkevic, M
Add filter to result:
Authors
Verstynen, H
Hayhurst, K
maddalon, J
neogi, N
Capolicchio, J
Mennuti, D
Milani, I
Fortunato, M
Petix, R
Reyes Gonzalez, J
Sunkevic, M
Thomas, A.D
Fulton, J.P
Khanal, S
Ortez, O
McGlinch, G
Topics
Unmanned Aerial Systems
Precision Agriculture and Global Food Security
Application of Granular Materials with Drones
Type
Oral
Year
2016
2022
2024
Home » Authors » Results

Authors

Filter results3 paper(s) found.

1. Safety and Certification Considerations for Expanding the Use of UAS in Precision Agriculture

The agricultural community is actively engaged in adopting new technologies such as unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) to help assess the condition of crops and develop appropriate treatment plans.  In the United States, agricultural use of UAS has largely been limited to small UAS, generally weighing less than 55 lb and operating within the line of sight of a remote pilot.  A variety of small UAS are being used to monitor and map crops, while only a few are being used to apply agricultural... H. Verstynen, K. Hayhurst, J. Maddalon, N. Neogi

2. Agriculture Machine Guidance Systems: Performance Analysis of Professional GNSS Receivers

GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems) plays nowadays a major role in different civilian activities and is a key technology enabling innovation in different market sectors. For instance, GNSS-enabled solutions are widespread within the Precision Agriculture and, among them, applications in the field of machinery guidance are commonly employed to optimize typical agriculture practices. The scope of this paper is to present the outcomes of the agriculture testing campaign performed,... J. Capolicchio, D. Mennuti, I. Milani, M. Fortunato, R. Petix, J. Reyes gonzalez, M. Sunkevic

3. Assessing the Distribution Uniformity of Broadcast-interseeded Cover Crops at Different Crop Stages by an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle

Drones can now carry larger payloads and have become more affordable, making them a viable option to use for broadcast-interseeding cover crops in the fall, prior to main crop harvest. This strategy has become popular in Ohio over the past two years. However, this new strategy arose quickly with a limited understanding of field performance of the drone’s distribution uniformity under different parameters such as rates, swath widths, speeds, or cash crop type. Therefore, the objective of... A.D. Thomas, J.P. Fulton, S. Khanal, O. Ortez, G. Mcglinch