- Unmanned aerial vehicle - Wikipedia
The term UAS was adopted by the United States Department of Defense (DoD) and the United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in 2005 according to their Unmanned Aircraft System Roadmap 2005–2030 [17]
- Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) | Federal Aviation Administration
UAS Research, Development, Demonstration, and Testing UAS Test Site Program Broad Agency Announcement Program
- UAS in Drones: What It Means Where It’s Used - Fly Eye
An Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) refers to the complete set of equipment necessary for the operation of an unmanned aircraft This includes the UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle), the ground-based controller, and the system of communications linking the two
- What Are Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS)? | Built In
Summary: Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) combine drones, control stations and communication links to execute missions without onboard pilots Used in fields from military intelligence to agriculture, UAS tech powers operations that are too risky or complex for humans alone
- What are Unmanned Aerial Systems?
Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS), or Unmanned Aircraft Systems, are sets of components used for communicating with controlling UAVs
- Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) | NBAA - National Business Aviation . . .
NBAA supports new federal privacy guidelines for the use of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) and encourages members to incorporate them into their UAS operations
- Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UASs): Current State, Emerging . . . - MDPI
This review manuscript explores the latest advancements for UAS, focusing on updated regulations, definitions, enabling technologies, and airspace classifications relevant to UAM operations
- Covered List FAQs: UAS and UAS Critical Components
Why did the FCC add certain Uncrewed Aircraft Systems (UAS or drones), UAS critical components, and other equipment and services to the Covered List on December 22, 2025?
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