中国测试一种定向能量束,可在飞行中为无人机充电。
China Tests Directed Energy Beam That Recharges Drones Mid-Flight

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/china-tests-directed-energy-beam-recharges-drones-mid-flight

## 无线供电助力无人机:耐力突破 中国西安电子大学的研究团队成功演示了使用微波向飞行中的无人机进行无线能量传输。该系统被称为“陆基航空母舰”,将能量从移动地面单元传输到无人机上的天线,从而实现无需降落的持续飞行——在49英尺高度实现了超过3.1小时的连续运行。 关键创新在于,通过GPS跟踪和实时飞行控制调整,保持能量束的稳定,即使在运动状态下也能如此。这项技术有望显著延长无人机的作战耐力,用于侦察、打击和电子战。 这一发展是更广泛的美国-中国无人机能力竞赛的一部分,美国正在探索基于微波和激光的系统。虽然激光具有精度优势,但微波在恶劣天气下更可靠,并且有可能同时为多个无人机供电,使其成为复杂和竞争环境下的理想选择。最终,这项技术可以重塑无人机设计,实现更小、更通用的平台,并提高有效载荷能力。

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原文

Authored by Bojan Stojkovski via Interesting Engineering,

A Chinese research team has successfully tested a wireless power transfer system that beams energy from the ground to a drone in flight using microwaves. 

The setup relies on a mobile emitter that directs energy to an antenna array mounted beneath the aircraft, enabling continuous power delivery without physical connections. Notably, the experiment maintained stable transmission even while both the drone and the ground unit were moving, marking a step beyond static demonstrations. 

Representational image of a Chinese drone.

Analysts have compared the concept to a “land-based aircraft carrier”, where an armoured vehicle could act as both a launch platform and an energy hub, sustaining drone operations in a manner similar to how naval carriers support aircraft at sea.

New system keeps drones flying for over three hours 

The concept could significantly expand how long drones remain in the air, supporting continuous surveillance, strike missions, and electronic warfare without frequent landings. The results, published in the peer-reviewed journal Aeronautical Science & Technology, come from a research team at Xidian University, an institution closely associated with defense-related technologies. 

During trials, the vehicle-mounted system sustained fixed-wing drones in flight for up to 3.1 hours while operating at an altitude of about 49 feet, demonstrating stable power delivery under real-world conditions, the South China Morning Post reported.

According to project lead Song Liwei, one of the main technical hurdles was keeping the microwave emitter precisely aligned with the drone while both were in motion. The team addressed this by combining GPS positioning, a real-time tracking mechanism, and onboard flight control systems to continuously correct the beam’s direction. This coordination allowed stable energy transfer despite movement and environmental variability.

As unmanned systems have become increasingly central to modern ground warfare, militaries and defense researchers have intensified efforts to develop wireless charging and in-flight power delivery technologies. Now, the goal is to reduce dependence on landing cycles and extend the operational endurance of drone fleets in contested environments.

US, China race to develop in-flight drone charging systems

Beyond extending flight endurance, the technology could also reshape drone design by reducing reliance on large onboard batteries, thereby freeing up space and weight for heavier payloads and additional sensors. In practical terms, this would allow smaller platforms to perform more complex missions without sacrificing range or endurance.

In the US, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has already backed multiple efforts investigating wireless energy transfer, including radio-frequency and laser-based systems. Furthermore, private companies are also demonstrating laser-based charging concepts, highlighting a parallel push toward airborne energy delivery systems.

Compared with other wireless energy approaches, laser-based systems offer higher precision and longer transmission ranges, but they are vulnerable to disruption from environmental factors such as fog, dust, and atmospheric turbulence. They can also create detectable infrared signatures, which may reveal a drone’s position to adversaries.

Microwave-based transmission takes a different trade-off, as it is generally more robust in poor weather conditions and less affected by line-of-sight degradation. In addition, a single microwave emitter could potentially supply energy to multiple drones at once, which makes the approach more suitable for dense operational environments or contested battlefields where resilience and scalability are critical.

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