Israel Unveils New Butterfly-Shaped Drone
Error: Contact form not found.
by JNS.org
Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) is developing a new Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) in the shape of a tiny butterfly. IAI hopes the vehicle can be used to reach remote locations and gather information. The artificial butterfly weighs only 20 grams and is capable of a vertical takeoff, just like a helicopter.
The butterfly can take color pictures and is managed remotely with a special helmet. “When you put this on you are actually inside the butterfly’s cockpit. You see what the butterfly sees. You can fly at any altitude and distance and see everything in real time,” said Dubi Binyamini, head of IAI’s mini-robotics department, according to Israel Hayom.
“The butterfly’s advantage is its ability to fly in an enclosed environment. There is no other aerial vehicle that can do that today,” he added.
Potential locations ideal for the butterfly are forests and jungles, and even closed man-made spaces like airports terminals and train stations.
Iran Moves to Pull Gaza Into US Talks Amid Bid to Shield Proxy Network
Mamdani-Backed Candidates Sweep NYC Democratic Primaries, Leaving Jewish and Pro-Israel New Yorkers Alarmed
British Doctors’ Union Votes to Scrap IHRA Antisemitism Definition Across UK Health Service
US to Move Forward With Turkey Jet Engine Sales Ahead of NATO Summit, Sources Say
Rubio Defends Iran Deal on Gulf Tour, Israel Insists on Troops in Southern Lebanon
Rubio Meets Gulf Leaders, Pledges Security Amid Iran Deal Doubts
Israel, Lebanon Discuss Pilot Scheme to Hand Over Territory
From the Editor: Don’t Forget the Iranian People
Apartheid? Arab Israeli Appointed Deputy Mayor of Tel Aviv
The False Binary: Why Critics Are Misreading the US-Iran Deal






The False Binary: Why Critics Are Misreading the US-Iran Deal
Meet the Hamas Terrorist Who Masqueraded as an Al Jazeera Journalist
From the Editor: Don’t Forget the Iranian People
Apartheid? Arab Israeli Appointed Deputy Mayor of Tel Aviv
How Israel Was Outsmarted by Iran — and What It Means for Netanyahu’s Legacy



