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DARPA Urban Challenge
Visits Pentagon
April 12, 2008
Defense Department employees got a
glimpse of the automobile of the future at a display of robot-driven
vehicles in the Pentagon’s center courtyard.
“Red”
Whittaker, leader of the Tartan Racing team, kneels next to
front-mounted radar and laser sensors that this robot-driven Chevrolet
Tahoe truck employs to “see” where it is going. The Tahoe was part of
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency-sponsored autonomous
vehicle exhibit in the Pentagon’s courtyard April 11, 2008.
The small four-door sedan, compact station wagon and four sport utility
vehicles in the exhibit can navigate themselves without human drivers
through a combination of servo-devices and radar- and laser-enabled
sensors, said Anthony J. Tether, director of the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency.
DARPA, now 50 years old, is a Defense Department agency that develops
new technology for military use.
“Imagine if we had convoys being driven by robots,” Tether said.
Military use of autonomous vehicles would nullify the human impact of
roadside bombs used by terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan, he explained.
The vehicles on display at the Pentagon had vied for honors during a
DARPA-sponsored competition called Urban Challenge that was held Nov. 3
on a closed course at the former George Air Force Base, in Victorville,
Calif. A modified 2007 Chevrolet Tahoe entered by Carnegie Mellon
University in Pittsburgh won first place, earning a $2 million cash
award for its Tartan Racing design team.
The
computer that “rides” in the back of the General Motors-donated Tahoe
takes the place of human thinking to drive the truck, “Red” Whittaker,
leader of the Tartan Racing team, said at the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency-sponsored autonomous vehicle exhibit in the Pentagon’s
courtyard April 11, 2008.
A computer brain that “rides” in the back of the General Motors-donated
Tahoe takes the place of human thinking to drive the truck, said “Red”
Whittaker, leader of the Tartan Racing team.
The much-modified, gasoline-powered truck incorporates a mix of radar-
and laser-operated sensors to “see” where it is going, Whittaker said.
Its multiple sensors collect data “and then the computer blends those
into a complete model of what is going on,” he explained.
“This robot with computers is very good at seeing what’s occurring now
and what it projects will happen in the future,” Whittaker said.
The current leading markets for robot-operated vehicles include farming
and surface-mining operations, Whittaker noted. Yet, the automotive
market could be the “blockbuster” of all potential markets for
autonomous vehicles, he said. The U.S. government has long studied the
feasibility and potential benefits of so-called “automated highways”
featuring vehicles that drive themselves, he noted.
Defense
Department employees check out six robot-driven vehicles in the
Pentagon’s center courtyard as part of the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency’s autonomous vehicle exhibit April 11, 2008.
Future use of such highways would likely reduce automobile accidents and
provide more efficient traffic management, Whittaker predicted.
“The automotive industry believes in the vision of driving automation,”
Whittaker pointed out. “And, that’s a big change from how things were a
year ago.”
Maj. John A. Moberly of the Army Staff was impressed with the
robot-driven vehicles on display.
“It is amazing technology that can save lives for us in the Army,”
Moberly said. “There is still definitely work to do and obstacles to
overcome, but it is very promising.” |