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Army plans to network ground robots and unmanned aircraft.


Army researchers are working on a program that would pair autonomous unmanned aircraft Unmanned Aircraft (UA) is a term used in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) definition of Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS). UA refers to the aircraft portion of the system required to operate it, also known as Unmanned Aerial Vehicle.  with ground robots.

A demonstration of this networking capability is scheduled for October, at Fort Dix Fort Dix, U.S. army training center, 32,000 acres (12,950 hectares), central N.J., SE of Trenton; est. 1917 as Camp Dix and named for U.S. statesman John A. Dix. In 1939 it was made a permanent garrison and renamed Fort Dix. , N.J., under me oversight of the Communications-Electronics Research Development and Engineering Center.

The program itself is still in the gestation period Gestation period

In mammals, the interval between fertilization and birth. It covers the total period of development of the offspring, which consists of a preimplantation phase (from fertilization to implantation in the mother's womb), an embryonic phase
." said Charles Shoemaker, chief of robotics at the Army Research Laboratory, "What we are doing this veer is pulling together all the relevant pieces. Some of us have already been thinking about some interaction of air-ground."

NUGAS, snort for Networked Unmanned Ground-Air Sensor, would find its use for battle damage assessment The timely and accurate estimate of damage resulting from the application of military force, either lethal or nonlethal, against a predetermined objective. Battle damage assessment can be applied to the employment of all types of weapon systems (air, ground, naval, and special forces , detection of suspicious packages, urban combat, or simply to cover a wide area.

"It is a way of covering a lot of real estate without having to actually maneuver around, by pairing air and ground." Shoemaker said in an interview. "Suppose that you saw a suspicious truck by the side of the road that you picked up from the air vehicle, you might then send over a ground robot with a sniffer that works with a different phenomenology phenomenology, modern school of philosophy founded by Edmund Husserl. Its influence extended throughout Europe and was particularly important to the early development of existentialism.  man the air vehicle."

For the demonstration. ARL ARL - ASSET Reuse Library  is providing the aerial platform-the R-MAX helicopter, developed by the Japanese compare Yamaha.

The pilotless helicopter was initially developed for crop dusting applications in Japan. It has a 70-pound payload and Is operated By remote control.

It includes Global Positioning System Global Positioning System: see navigation satellite.
Global Positioning System (GPS)

Precise satellite-based navigation and location system originally developed for U.S. military use.
 and laser radar to detect objects. Carnegie Mellon developed the sensor technology.

The air vehicle will be operated from the control station of the ground robot, said Shoemaker. Using the ground vehicle in conjunction with the helicopter will give the soldiers a broader selection of sensors and payloads that the airframe does not employ. "A single soldier can influence the situation that takes place in [an] area both by extending his ability to view the terrain and to examine things more closely."

A ground vehicle can stay in position for a much longer period of time than a UAV UAV Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
UAV Unmanned Air Vehicle
UAV Unmanned Aerospace Vehicle
UAV Unmanned Airborne Vehicle
UAV Uninhabited Air Vehicle
UAV Urban Assault Vehicle
UAV Unpiloted Aerial Vehicle (less common) 
, said Shoemaker. The network combines the information received by the helicopter's sensors and the laser radar with the information generated by the ground vehicle. That combined information is transferred into a digital map.

With data flowing both from the air and the ground, soldiers would be able to "fly down the road and see if there is a safe route, and then run the UGV UGV Unmanned Ground Vehicle
UGV Unattended Ground Vehicle
 to detect if there are things that you can't see from the air," he said. "That is an instance where the whole is more than the sum of the individual parts. You can get more information than you can get with either one separately."

Combining the two unmanned systems provides more accurate data of the terrain, said Jeff Jaczkowski, an Army engineer. "You can do better pre-mission planning."

Shoemaker cautioned that the Army is in the early stages of evaluating potential applications for this network. Live demonstrations will be augmented with simulation and modeling, Shoemaker said.

The biggest challenge in this program, he said, is identifying the points of "major leverage" and pinpointing the best combination of an air-ground team of robots.
COPYRIGHT 2004 National Defense Industrial Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Army Unmanned Air
Author:Tiron, Roxana
Publication:National Defense
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2004
Words:515
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