Abstract

AbstractMountain search and rescue (MSAR) seeks to assist people in extreme remote environments. This method of emergency response often relies on crewed aircraft to perform aerial visual search. Many MSAR teams use low‐cost, consumer‐grade unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to augment the crewed aircraft operations. These UAVs are primarily developed for aerial photography and lack many features critical (e.g., probability‐prioritized coverage path planning) to support MSAR operations. As a result, UAVs are underutilized in MSAR. A case study of a recent mountain search and recovery scenario that did not use, but may have benefited from, UAVs is provided. An overview of the mission is augmented with a subject matter expert‐informed analysis of how the mission may have benefited from current UAV technology. Lastly, mission relevant requirements are presented along with a discussion of how future UAV development can seek to bridge the gap between state‐of‐the‐art robotics and MSAR.

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