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Robots

English village to be invaded in spybot competition

  • 13:41 29 April 2008
  • NewScientist.com news service
  • Ceri Perkins
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This village, built for urban warfare training during the Cold War, will host teams of ground-based and aerial robots hunting for snipers, bombs, and other threats (Image: MoD)
This village, built for urban warfare training during the Cold War, will host teams of ground-based and aerial robots hunting for snipers, bombs, and other threats (Image: MoD)
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Surveillance footage from a high-flying unmanned plane will be used by the software that guides this smaller aircraft and the ground-based robot (Image: Stellar Consortium)
Surveillance footage from a high-flying unmanned plane will be used by the software that guides this smaller aircraft and the ground-based robot (Image: Stellar Consortium)
A swarm of eight
A swarm of eight "quadrotor" vehicles could look like this when it competes this summer (Image: Swarm Systems)
 

A village in south-west England will shortly be swarming with robots competing to show off their surveillance skills.

The event is the UK Ministry of Defence's (MoD) answer to the US DARPA Grand Challenge that set robotic cars against one another to encourage advances in autonomous vehicles.

The MoD Grand Challenge is instead designed to boost development of teams of small robots able to scout out hidden dangers in hostile urban areas.

Over 10 days in August, 11 teams of robots will compete to locate and identify four different threats hidden around a mock East German village used for urban warfare training, at Copehill Down, Wiltshire (see image, top right).

The robots must find snipers, armed vehicles, armed foot soldiers, and improvised explosive devices hidden around the village, and relay a real-time picture of what is happening back to a command post.

Urban hazards

The robots will need to negotiate the complexity of an urban environment to find the threats. Hazards include unfamiliar terrain and buildings, trees, near-invisible overhead wires and other urban clutter.

Teams will earn points based on how many threats they locate in one hour, and how autonomous they are. For example, a team will lose points if they use remote control to direct their vehicles at any stage of the trial.

The teams that score highest will be rewarded with the potential of a lucrative contract with the MoD, which hopes to see the best ideas rapidly developed to the point they can be deployed by UK forces in places such as Afghanistan and southern Iraq.

"We are in no doubt that this is a difficult challenge," says Grand Challenge programme leader, Andy Wallace.

Software control

Of the 23 initial entries from teams made up of private companies and universities, 11 were selected to take part in the final, with six thought promising enough to receive MoD funding.

One funded team, the Stellar Consortium, uses two aerial robots and one ground-based one.

A 3m wing-span unmanned air vehicle (UAV) will fly 65 metres above the village and use cameras to gather wide-area surveillance used by software to direct a smaller, 1m UAV flying at 20 metres, and an unmanned ground vehicle (UGV), (see image, middle right).

Those two vehicles use thermal, visual, and radar sensors to make more detailed observations that can be reported back to the base station.

"Physically, the vehicles all have to be launched by someone," explains Julia Richardson, Director of Stellar Research, "but after that, the mission-planning software hosted at the ground station takes full control."

Owl swarm

A team called Swarm Systems uses more robots. "We need to gather as much sensory information as possible," says team leader Stephen Crampton, "so we're using eight vehicles. And we're going by air because it gives you more viewing angles."

Dubbed "Owls", their battery-powered, Frisbee-sized vehicles weigh under a kilogram and have four small propellers (see image, right). Able to hover and dart like birds, they are GPS-guided and communicate with one another, and the base station, using Wi-Fi. Each Owl carries a trio of 5 megapixel cameras.

"Without giving too much away, the processing power on board each of these vehicles is pretty impressive," adds Crampton. "They could run full-blown Windows Vista."

User-friendly tech

A third team, Silicon Valley, has opted to rely less heavily on autonomous vehicles. They have used off-the-shelf technology for the hardware as much as possible, and focused more development onto image recognition and analysis software.

"If you can automate that part, then you have a useful tool," explains team leader, Norman Gregory. "What we intend to do is deploy various platforms, depending on what the scenario is."

The team will use a mixture of ground and air-based vehicles, although the team is not yet releasing the exact details. The main ground vehicle is the size of a ride-on lawnmower (see image, bottom right) and can be GPS-guided or remotely directed by a human.

Robots - Learn more about the robotics revolution in our continually updated special report.

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There are 4 comments on 1 page

Advanced Robotics

By Tmg

Tue Apr 29 16:00:37 BST 2008

"They could run full-blown Windows Vista"

so funny !

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Advanced Robotics

By Mf

Thu May 01 00:43:55 BST 2008

Vista + WMOD... Great. So that is how the war against the machines will start and I though it was gonna be due to smart programming!

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Defeatability

By Jeremy

Tue Apr 29 16:49:43 BST 2008

Interesting competition; great idea. I wonder if some simple measure like stringing a knee-high wire across a road would defeat the ground vehicles. Enemies will learn countermeasures, like the vietnamese hanging buckets of urine in trees to defeat ammonia-smelling sensors that detected enemy soldiers in the vietnam war.

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Recruits

By Craig

Sat May 17 14:36:42 BST 2008

Why not just attach a gun and a playstation controller and use these "toys" to defeat the enemy? I imagine the cost would be high, but not in freindly human casulties. It would be like playing a realistic computer game. Scary stuff!

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There are 4 comments on 1 page

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