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Drone art

Images drawn in the sky by drones carrying colored lights From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Drone art
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Drone art (also known as drone display or drone light show) is the use of multiple unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), often quadcopters which fly in a coordinated fashion with light fixtures attached. They are usually equipped with multiple LEDs and the display is held at night.

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Crowds watch a drone show at the Coronation Concert at Windsor Castle.
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A drone launch in Russia to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Yuri Gagarin's flight to space in 1961

Drone light shows differ from fireworks displays in that drones are reusable;[1] they do not produce air and noise pollution.[2] However, drone displays cannot happen during rain or strong winds.[3]

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History

The first drone display was presented in June 2012 in Cannes, France; Marshmallow Laser Feast presented Meet Your Creator at the Saatchi & Saatchi New Directors' Showcase for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

Intel has produced the Shooting Star, a type of drone used in light shows.[4] The drones were used during the 2018 Winter Olympics, a Super Bowl halftime show in 2017, and a 2018 Fourth of July celebration.[2]

In the 2020s, some cities in the United States replaced Independence Day fireworks displays with drone or laser light shows, to reduce fire risk, air pollution, and the disturbance of dogs and people with PTSD.[5] Concerns about safety have also emerged in response to malfunctioning of public drone light displays, such as prior to a match in the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, 350 of the 500 performing drones plunged into the water due to a glitch.[6]

In December 2024, a missing flight path information led to some of drones to collide into each other in a 500 drone Orlando, Florida show.[7][8] Many drones fell and one of the drones fell on a seven year old boy in the chest and caused a heart damage that required an open-heart surgery.[9]

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Drone displays

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Drone displays are typically used for entertainment or advertising. The drones may use flocking or swarming behaviour.[10] Real-time kinematic positioning (RTK) technology is used for precise relative positioning of the drones to centimeter scale or better. Each drone has a preprogrammed flight path for its role in producing the images.

Drone shows are using more and more drones every year as technology advances. Listed below are those notable for breaking records, using new technologies, or otherwise gaining significance. For a more comprehensive overview, see List of drone displays.

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Drone teams

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References

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