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$2 MILLION AT END OF ROAD DRIVERLESS ROBOT VEHICLES COMPETING IN DESERT RACE.


Byline: Dana Bartholomew Staff Writer

When Rascal the robot zigzagged around a hilly obstacle course obstacle course
n.
1. A training course filled with obstacles, such as ditches and walls, that must be negotiated speedily by troops undergoing training or participants in an obstacle race.

2.
 this week in pursuit of a $2 million government prize, onlookers snickered at its rough-hewn looks.

But the skepticism died as the quirky all-terrain vehicle, built by SciAutonics of Thousand Oaks, whizzed past and qualified for today's DARPA Grand Challenge The DARPA Grand Challenge is a prize competition for driverless cars, sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the central research organization of the United States Department of Defense.  race of robots across the rugged Mojave Desert.

``We're pretty much the naked car - everything shows,'' said John Porter, head of the SciAutonics volunteer team that qualified this week at California Speedway. ``We're the little car that can.''

For the second year, Rascal will join some of the world's most sophisticated robots in a driverless race launched by the Pentagon to spur a new generation of unmanned military vehicles.

Twenty-three cars - including a Jeep Cherokee entered by Axion ax·i·on  
n.
A hypothetical boson having no charge or spin and small mass, proposed to explain the existence of certain symmetries of the strong nuclear force.



[axi(al) + -on1.]
 Racing of Westlake Village - will set off at 6:30 a.m. from Primm, Nev., on a 150-mile course through tumbleweeds and jackrabbits.

The first vehicle to complete the Grand Challenge in less than 10 hours wins. The prize is $2 million, double last year's reward.

``It's a winner-take-all,'' said Tom Goodwin, spokesman for the Grand Challenge hosted by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), U.S. government agency administered by the Department of Defense (see Defense, United States Department of). , the Pentagon's research arm. DARPA DARPA: see Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.


(Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) The name given to the U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency during the 1980s. It was later renamed back to ARPA.
 put up the prize and spent $9 million on this year's race.

``Axion was very strong. SciAutonics was very strong. All 23 teams can do it. ... We don't have any doubt.''

Last year, seven teams, including both Conejo Valley entries, qualified for the race, but each fizzled soon after the starting gate.

This year, organizers say, the cars are much more sophisticated - with better radar, sensors, lasers and cameras to guide the way via onboard computer brains.

Bill Kehaly, team leader of Axion Racing, said his stereo-vision cameras and military navigation system give his '94 Cherokee the edge against high-dollar teams from Stanford and Carnegie Mellon universities.

The Axion team, comprised mostly of San Diego engineers, is backed by two racy rac·y  
adj. rac·i·er, rac·i·est
1. Having a distinctive and characteristic quality or taste.

2. Strong and sharp in flavor or odor; piquant or pungent.

3. Risqué; ribald.

4.
 blondes from ``The Man Show.''

``SciAutonics' looks like 'Star Wars;' ours looks like Mom's and Dad's Jeep,'' said Kehaly, owner of a South Pacific island water company whose car comes equipped with two blue surfboards.

``You flip a coupla switches, put in a PIN, a GPS manager - it drives itself. Say a little prayer and push 'Go.'''

The SciAutonics team, comprised of retired gearheads and volunteers from Rockwell Scientific and Amgen, joined forces with Auburn (Ala.) University.

Its itty-bitty ATV (1) (Advanced TV) An early name for the digital TV standard proposed by the Advisory Committee on Advanced Television Service (ACATS). See ACATS. See also ATV Forum.

(2) (Analog TV) Refers to the NTSC, PAL and SECAM analog TV standads.
 quad aims to trounce such leading SUV diesels as the Hummer of CMU CMU - Carnegie Mellon University  and the VW Toureg of Stanford.

``It's rock solid,'' said Porter. ``Both of those teams can go right off the trail - and Rascal may race across the finish line. We're very optimistic.''

Dana Bartholomew, (818) 713-3730

dana.bartholomew(at)dailynews.com

CAPTION(S):

10 photos, box

Photo:

(1 -- color) Members of Team SciAutonics get ready Friday for today's DARPA 2005 Grand Challenge.

(2 -- 4) Pasadena's Team Caltech, top, readies its unmanned van Alice for a one-mile test Friday before today's DARPA's 2005 Grand Challenge. Axion Racing's team leader, Bill Kehaly, second from top, makes sure the surfboards are firmly secured on the Westlake Village team's Jeep, which sets out on a test drive, above.

(5 -- 6) Team Caltech takes its van Alice, above, for a test drive Friday. Below, Team SciAutonics works to fix a software problem on its ATV quad.

Gene Blevins/Special to the Daily News

(7 -- 8) These vehicles failed

(9) Team CIMAR Ci`mar´

n. 1. See Simar.
 vehicle

(10) Team UCF's `Night Rider'

Box:

Robot Rally in the Desert

Source: University of Florida's Team CIMAR, University of Central Florida's Team UCF UCF University of Central Florida
UCF Uranium Conversion Facility
UCF Uniform Contract Format
UCF Unregistration Confirm
UCF Unit Capability Factor (power plant performance)
UCF User Communication Form
UCF United Cat Federation
, Defense Advanced Research projects Agency (U.S. Defense Department)

Graphic: Belinda Long, Sun-Sentinal

2005 KRT KRT Knight Ridder/Tribune
KRT Keratin
KRT Knights of the Round Table (Diablo gaming guild)
KRT Khartoum, Sudan - Civil (Airport Code)
KRT Kleene's Recursion Theorem
 
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Oct 8, 2005
Words:612
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