Title: DARPA Grand Challenge
1DARPA Grand Challenge
It shall be a goal of the Armed Forces that by
2015, one-third of the operational ground combat
vehicles of the Armed Forces are unmanned. (S.
2549, Sec. 217)
- A 175 mile race through the desert
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3Description of Challenge
- Up to 175 mile route through the desert
- Mountainous terrain up / down 2000 ft
- Completely autonomous vehicles
- For March 2004, 106 teams entered, 25 qualified,
5 made it past the first 100 yds - Best showing Carnegie Mellon _at_ 7.4 mi
4Best Showings
- "Vehicle 22 Red Team (Carnegie Mellon) At mile
7.4, on switchbacks in a mountainous section,
vehicle went off course, got caught on a berm and
rubber on the front wheels caught fire, which was
quickly extinguished. Vehicle was
command-disabled. - "Vehicle 21 SciAutonics II At mile 6.7,
two-thirds of the way up Daggett Ridge, vehicle
went into an embankment and became stuck. Vehicle
was command-disabled. - "Vehicle 9 The Golem Group At mile 5.2, while
going up a steep hill, vehicle stopped on the
road, in gear and with engine running, but
without enough throttle to climb the hill. After
trying for 50 minutes, the vehicle was
command-disabled."
5Sand
6Unpaved road
7Water
8Rocky Road
9Rough Terrain
10Under Highways
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12Summary of the Rules
- The vehicle must travel autonomously on the
ground in under ten hours. - The vehicle must stay within the course
boundaries as defined by a data file provided by
DARPA. - The vehicle may use GPS and other public signals.
- No control commands may be sent to the vehicle
while en route. - The vehicle must not intentionally touch any
other competing vehicle. Destructive behavior
is prohibited. - Tethered subsystems cannot be propelled or
maneuvered independently of the ground vehicle. - Vehicles must have minimal environmental impact.
13Race Video Footage, 2004
- History Channel Special about the Million Dollar
Challenge
14What is our objective?
- Develop technologies for general use
- Invent valuable IP
- Build a new high-value company
- Promote Indiana technology
- Win the 2M prize
15Current and Future applications of Autonomous
Vehicles
- Delivery and disposal of hazardous materials
- Military logistics -- transport of materials
- Non-military logistics hospitals, airports,
warehouses, manufacturing plants - Airport baggage
- Farming and agriculture
- Advance ground warfare
- People movers
16Major Milestones
- December 15 Basic autonomous operation
- March 11 Application video and paper
- May 2 DARPA Site visit
- September 28 NQE (National Qualifying Event)
- October 8 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge
17Current Team Members
- Currently 22 All Indiana team members
- 6 entrepreneurial business owners, some with
substantial robotics experience - 3 professors with control, robotics, vision
experience - 4 students
- 9 engineering/programming professionals
- A combined 300 Years of experience on the team.
18Where We Meet on Saturdays
19Skills Needed
- Vendor survey of available sensors and their
capabilities - Evaluate trade offs for a "make / buy" decision
and sensor sophistication level - Physical mounting, environmental protection and
articulation of sensor (if required) - Software signal conditioning and compensation
- Pattern recognition software for terrain,
obstacles, landmarks and localization - Sensor integrity analysis software for confidence
evaluation - Software interface to navigation controller
20Sensor Technologies
- DGPS - 3D absolute localization and time standard
- LADAR - a "cloud of LASER points" with both
distance and intensity components - Vision - Passive cameras stereoscopic, wide
angle, color - Odometry - encoders on passive wheels
- Inertial - 6DOF motion sensors
- Magnetic - 3D field orientation, compass
functions and local fields (power lines) - RADAR - Background speed, vehicle following /
passing, metal obstacles - Thermal - FLIR thermal imaging
- Vibration / Shock - robot health and terrain
analysis - Touch - whiskers for "last resort" obstacle
detection - Ultrasonic - SONAR for detection of objects
transparent to other technologies - Clinometers - gravity based orientation (not
inertial) - Helioscope - sun tracking for robot pose and
shadow identification - Altimeters - for topographic map rationalization
21Software
- Motion control software (steering, throttle, etc)
- Real-time image analysis and feature extraction
- Sensor array and fusion software
- Navigation control software
- Path planning
- Obstacle avoidance software
- General system architecture
- Network communications
- Operating system
- Fault tolerance
- Logical deployment of recovery systems
- Mapping technology
22Mechanical Technologies
- Gyro-stabilized sensor platform
- Electrical system, battery backup
- Environment controls (A/C, humidity)
- Ruggedization
- Robot health
- E-Stop interface
- Vehicle dynamics
- Vehicle protection
- Recovery systems
23Other Required Functions
- Development tools
- System integration
- Testing
- Project Management
- Cost management
- Marketing
- Public relations
- Web development
- Sponsorship recruitment
24Jeep Rubicon Chosen, Oct 04
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26Our Jeep Rubicon
27Our Jeep Rubicon
28Installing Drive-by-Wire Now!!
29Drive-by-Wire
30Ways for Purdue to be Involved
- Class project(s)
- Extra-curricular activity
- Faculty research
- Other?
31LADAR Arrays in Hi-res Dynamic Environment
Analysis
- Recognize roads, terrain contours, and identify
obstacles from an unstable vehicle traveling at
100 kilometers per hour with resolution in the
centimeter range
32Multi-spectral RADAR for Terrain Profiling
- Identify hard and soft terrain features using
RADAR at different frequencies to identify hard
packed road paths from surrounding ground and
rocks from bushes.
33SONAR arrays in a High Speed, Unstructured
Environment
- Wind and speed create difficulties in extracting
data from ultrasonic reflections
34Using Arrays of GPS Receivers to Circumvent
Invalid Positioning
- Differential GPS corrects for a subset of
positioning errors. An array of GPS receivers
may allow faulty data from other error sources to
be identified and either ignored or corrected.
35Map Matching from Terrain Contours
- Fused sensor data of surrounding terrain is used
to register against topological and aerial maps
for road identification and localization without
GPS.
36Stabilizing Instrument Platforms on High Speed
Land Vehicles
- Sensor stabilization may be critical for making
sense of sensor data in real-time.
37Sensor Fusion for Separating Critical Obstacles
from Benign Terrain Features
- Develop methods for using inputs from multiple
sensors to separate dangerous obstacles such as
rocks from easily negotiated terrain features
such as shadows or tumbleweeds.
38Sensor Fusion for Identifying Roads in an
Unstructured Environment
- Making best determination of road location with
oftentimes conflicting imaging and
obstacle-avoidance sensor data.
39Strategic Recovery of an Autonomous Vehicle from
Indeterminate Situated State
- If the vehicle is immobile and sensor data is
contradictory, what steps can be taken to free
the vehicle from its situation and restore sensor
effectiveness.
40Why Purdue Involvement?
- Worthy challenge for top engineering school
- Multi-disciplinary approach
- University-to-university collaboration
- University-to-industry collaboration
- Creation of a high-tech start-up
- Long-term, ground-breaking research opportunities
41More Information
- Our website is http//IndyRobotics.com
- DARPA site is http//www.darpa.mil/grandchallenge
42THANK YOU!!
- If you have interest, please contact us!
43Doug Traster
- Mr. Traster is an electrical engineering graduate
of the University of Texas at Austin with 30
years of experience in embedded controller design
and development, the last ten of which were in
robotic applications. He is the inventor of three
patents in video display design two of which are
licensed for all closed caption televisions. He
is also knowledgeable in data communications
technology with patents in HDLC channelized T1. - Mr. Traster formed his first company, Varix
Corporation, in 1981. It was one of the first
personal computer based test equipment companies
in the world. Varix built a universal PROM and
PLD programmer, the first of it's kind to contain
device programming algorithms entirely in
software. - Mr. Traster's current company, Volant
Corporation, was formed in 1985. It operates as a
turnkey contract developer for a wide range of
projects including high speed data communication,
automobile diagnostic equipment, channelized T1,
database applications, document management, and
other embedded controller applications. In the
last 15 years, the company has focused primarily
on software and electronics for controlling
robotic equipment - storage / retrieval systems,
semiconductor device handlers and mobile robots. - Mr. Traster volunteers his time for Middle School
and High School robotics. For the last three
years he has mentored LEGO Mindstorms for the
Indianapolis Public Library, provided technical
leadership for several FIRST LEGO League teams
and provided engineering leadership on a FIRST
Robotics team.
44Scott Jones
- Scott Jones, inventor of several patents,
including telephone-company Voicemail used by
over 500 million people globally, continues to
actively build businesses that capitalize on
advanced technologies. Founder/Chairman of one
of Indianas leading VC firms, Gazelle
TechVentures, as well as Founder/Chairman of
Gracenote (maker of the widely-used Internet
music recognition service, CDDB) and Escient
(maker of the first hard-disk based music systems
for the home), he served as Chairman of the
Indiana Technology Partnership, a statewide
organization comprised of business, academic, and
civic leaders. Graduating from IU in 84, he was
a research scientist at MITs Artificial
Intelligence Lab and then founded Boston
Technology in 86.