DARPA Wants Atlas Robot To Go Wireless 19
mikejuk writes: Atlas is a humanoid robot, one of the most advanced in the world. But it's always had cables that provided it with power and made it look a little like a dog on a leash. It was designed to provide a hardware platform for teams competing in the DARPA Robotics Challenge — a competition designed to encourage the construction of an effective disaster response robot. DARPA now says the finals of the challenge later in the year will require that the robots be completely wireless.
Power will be supplied by an onboard 3.7 kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery. That battery will drive a variable-pressure pump which operates all of the hydraulic systems. The pump makes ATLAS much quieter, but introduces a complication for the teams: it can be run at low pressure to save power and then switched to high pressure to get harder work done. Managing power consumption will be a very difficult task, but DARPA has also upped the prize money to $3.5 million in total.
Power will be supplied by an onboard 3.7 kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery. That battery will drive a variable-pressure pump which operates all of the hydraulic systems. The pump makes ATLAS much quieter, but introduces a complication for the teams: it can be run at low pressure to save power and then switched to high pressure to get harder work done. Managing power consumption will be a very difficult task, but DARPA has also upped the prize money to $3.5 million in total.
Wireless - does that also mean autonomous? (Score:1)
So operating the robot wirelessly - will that mean it is completely self-contained? By which I mean, does the robot's shell contain all of the computer control / decision-making equipment it needs to operate and move around, or will this equipment remain on separate hardware, transmitting commands wirelessly to a much smaller "movement control" system on-board?
Just wondering if cutting the cords means that the robot could simply be told "go and explore your environment", with the decision-making on where t
First (Score:2)
You need a power source
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You need a power source
Man, it's right in the summary... I know people here aren't supposed to read the articles, but stop right after the headline is too much!
For Comparison (Score:2)
This is the big one (Score:2)
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"I'm not an engineer and probably not qualified for saying this. But it seems like it has plain(straight) feet. Doesn't that make it harder to walk?"
Personally I have no problems walking with straight plain feet. I almost never fall over.
Taking a step back from the power source issue (Score:1)
Taking a step back from the power source issue (Score:1)
Radioactivity does not interfere with wireless lan. It does interfere with non rad-hard electronics in general though.
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but shielded corridors inside a shielded power plant would not allow full building wifi penetration