South Korea develops bird strike defense robot - MeraForum Community.No 1 Pakistani Forum Community

MeraForum Community.No 1 Pakistani Forum Community

link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link | link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link| link|
MeraForum Community.No 1 Pakistani Forum Community » The World of Information » Science & Technology » Robots & Artificial Intelligence (AI) » South Korea develops bird strike defense robot
Robots & Artificial Intelligence (AI) Share robots and artificial intelligence stuffs here

Advertisement
 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
(#1)
Old
(‘“*JiĢδR*”’) (‘“*JiĢδR*”’) is offline
 


Posts: 43,615
My Photos: ()
Country:
Star Sign:
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: © ℓ ợ Ş ệ → тớ → ΅г ↔ ♥
Gender: Male
pix320 South Korea develops bird strike defense robot - >>   Show Printable Version  Show Printable Version   Email this Page  Email this Page   11-26-2012, 01:35 PM


The Korean Atomic Energy Group and LIG Nex1 (an aerospace and defense subsidiary of LG Corp) have jointly developed what they are calling the world's first bird strike defense robot. Birds are a major headache around military air bases and civilian airports all over the world, as they can cause significant damage when they collide with aircraft or get sucked into engines. The robot is a six-wheeled unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) that uses a combination of directional acoustics and laser patterns to scare birds away.




The UGV is semi-autonomous, meaning a human operator manages its operations from a control station. The robot is able to avoid obstacles and return to specific locations autonomously, so that even if the station becomes inoperable it won't cause accidents. It measures approximately eight feet (2.5 meters) long and weighs 1.2 tons (1.09 tonnes). It's rigged with a combination of directional acoustic transmission and detection, green laser transmission, day and night color cameras, thermal imaging and laser scanners, and can perform day and night in any weather conditions.

According to KBS news, there have been more than 460 bird strikes over the last five years in South Korea. The designers claim the UGV is 20 percent more effective than other systems at combating the problem. South Korea's Channel A describes the sounds emitted by the UGV as a series of loud pops (100 dB) and up to 13 other sounds (including those based on predators that birds avoid). The cameras are able to track a bird one foot (30.5 cm) in length from 328 yards (300 meters), and at night green laser patterns that can travel up to 1.2 miles (2 km) are used to frighten them away. Up to four UGVs can be monitored and controlled per station.


The project was announced in 2009, and in late 2011 the first field trials took place at a South Korean military air base. Now the system is being rolled out in multiple airfields, with the intent of proving its capabilities to international buyers. The technology developed for this UGV may also be transferred to unmanned landmine detection systems, combat vehicles, and supply vehicles.

Source: KBS News (Korean) and Channel A (Korean)

 



დ∫დ→◄●♥●►↔ǺήĐằŽ~◊Ệ◊~ίάΫǻЙ↔◄●♥●►←დ∫დ




Reply With Quote Share on facebook
Sponsored Links
 

Bookmarks

Tags
bird, defense, develops, korea, robot, south, strike


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
In defense of the Niqab (―*♥€»ƙɧՄՏɧՅԾԾ«€♥*―) Islamic Poetry 9 10-19-2012 10:59 PM
South Korea's Small Robot Dog Quietly Prances Around eXquisite Inception Robots & Artificial Intelligence (AI) 10 06-03-2012 09:44 AM


All times are GMT +5. The time now is 11:57 AM.
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

All the logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. All stuff found on this site is posted by members / users and displayed here as they are believed to be in the "public domain". If you are the rightful owner of any content posted here, and object to them being displayed, please contact us and it will be removed promptly.

Nav Item BG