Not every student working on an ADSC project had to write a Master’s Thesis. Also, some of the students also worked on other, UAV-related projects at the same time. Therefore, listed below are only seven M.S. theses that were devoted to ADSC projects entirely. They are (the ones with no link have a limited distribution): | - Payload Derived Position Acquisition System for Parachute Recovery Systems, by Mr. Ryan D. Tiaden, graduated in December of 2007.
- Autonomous Video Scoring of Air Delivery Payloads, by Mr. Robert M. Berlind, graduated in March of 2006.
- High Glide Parachute Aerodynamics Modeling, by Mr. Paul A. Mortaloni, graduated in December of 2002.
- Development of a Six-Degree-of-Freedom Model for a Fully Deployed G-12 AGAS Delivery System, by Mr. Christopher D. Junge, graduated in December of 2001.
- Hardware Integration of Parachute Guidance, Navigation, and Control for the Affordable Guided Airdrop System (AGAS), by Mr. James G. Johnson, graduated in September of 2001.
- Optimal Parachute Guidance, Navigation, and Control for the Affordable Guided Airdrop System (AGAS), by Mr. Timothy A. Williams, graduated in June of 2000.
- Low-Cost Parachute Navigation, Guidance and Control, by Mr. Scott H. Dellicker, graduated in March of 1999.
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