Inside Science and Technology 

Bug-Sized ‘Bots for the Urban Battle 

2,008 

 By Grace V. Jean  

See that spider crawling along the sidewalk? In five years, you might want to take a closer look to see if it has a nanocomposite exoskeleton or cameras and infrared sensors for its eyes.

No, you haven’t stumbled upon a Hollywood set filming the sequel to “Minority Report,” the Tom Cruise sci-fi flick in which tarantula-like police ‘bots scuttle through buildings to identify people by scanning their irises. But you will have happened upon a technology that was inspired in part by the movie.

The Army Research Laboratory in April awarded a $37 million contract to BAE Systems to develop biologically based surveillance and reconnaissance robots to help soldiers conduct urban warfare. The terrestrial and aerial unmanned systems are part of a recent spate of Defense Department initiatives to spur miniature robotics innovations for troops on the ground.

Officials believe these insect- and bird-sized robots will help close the gap on surveillance needs not being met by the larger drones flying in the skies over Iraq and Afghanistan.

“You can’t always get a Predator over there fast enough or with the right sensors on it to provide the surveillance, particularly if troops want to know what is inside a building,” says Aaron Penkacik, chief technology officer for electronics and integrated solutions at BAE Systems. The company will lead an alliance of scientists and researchers from government, academic and industry laboratories to design and build collaborative robots that will provide troops intelligence whenever and wherever they require it, he says.

Imagine a Marine or soldier patrolling a city block when he suspects there might be insurgents in one of the buildings ahead. He stops, pulls several small robots out of his backpack and deploys them into the air and on the ground. They fly and scramble ahead, sending back images and audio to a handheld device monitored from the safety of his vehicle or under protection of his comrades.

Depending on what sensors they carry, the robots may be able to map out interior hallways, detect the transmissions from a radio and track a departing vehicle near the building. Based upon that information, troops can make better decisions on how to handle the situation.

Much of the technology already exists piecemeal in commercial and academic research labs, says Penkacik. The collaboration will allow engineers to mine previous work and couple those technologies with new developments in micro-electronics, signal processing and algorithms that will allow the small robots to be realized. But there are numerous challenges.

“It’s not a slam dunk. None of these things are — they’re hard. This is hard science,” says Penkacik.

Translating biological systems to robotic hardware will require significant advances in lightweight materials and mechanical engineering techniques. Though academic researchers have replicated how a bee flies and hovers on a rudimentary scale, much work remains to make such systems viable outside of the lab. Ongoing work in miniaturization processes and power consumption will help to alleviate the challenges in electronics packaging and heat dissipation. The team will try to leverage technologies from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s Urban Challenge last fall, Penkacik adds. The competition required teams to develop autonomous cars and trucks capable of driving through a closed suburban course on a former military base. While the race was deemed a success by the robotics industry, it also highlighted the difficulties in programming vehicles to react to moving obstacles. The BAE team will have the additional burden of developing algorithms to allow collaborative behavior between its robots.

Once researchers address those challenges, they will conquer the task of converting the gathered data into useful knowledge for the war fighter. Most of the drones’ battlefield data today is sent to a central processing site, which analyzes and then disseminates the information back to the fighters. Penkacik says the team intends to provide such knowledge directly to soldiers by having the robots operate in an ad hoc network to distribute the information to their PDAs.

Troops have noted that the ability to rapidly deploy surveillance technologies and create timely knowledge of their surroundings is of utmost importance, followed by the persistence and the duration of surveillance. The team is taking those requirements into consideration as they define the variety of system configurations needed for urban missions. Once completed, it will begin the design phase. By 2013, the team hopes to have developed demonstrable prototypes of the robots, if not deployable hardware.

 

Please email your comments to GJean@ndia.org

Submit Your Reader's Comment Below
*Name
 
*eMail
 
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
*Comments
 
 
Refresh
Please enter the text displayed in the image.
The picture contains 6 characters.
*Characters
  
*Legal Notice

NDIA is not responsible for screening, policing, editing, or monitoring your or another user's postings and encourages all of its users to use reasonable discretion and caution in evaluating or reviewing any posting. Moreover, and except as provided below with respect to NDIA's right and ability to delete or remove a posting (or any part thereof), NDIA does not endorse, oppose, or edit any opinion or information provided by you or another user and does not make any representation with respect to, nor does it endorse the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, or reliability of any advice, opinion, statement, or other material displayed, uploaded, or distributed by you or any other user. Nevertheless, NDIA reserves the right to delete or take other action with respect to postings (or parts thereof) that NDIA believes in good faith violate this Legal Notice and/or are potentially harmful or unlawful. If you violate this Legal Notice, NDIA may, in its sole discretion, delete the unacceptable content from your posting, remove or delete the posting in its entirety, issue you a warning, and/or terminate your use of the NDIA site. Moreover, it is a policy of NDIA to take appropriate actions under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and other applicable intellectual property laws. If you become aware of postings that violate these rules regarding acceptable behavior or content, you may contact NDIA at 703.522.1820.