BAE Systems will lead a team of scientists that will develop miniature robots to improve military situational awareness. The company signed a $38 million agreement with the U.S. Army Research Laboratory to lead an alliance of researchers and scientists from the Army, academia and industry.
The Micro Autonomous Systems and Technology (MAST) Collaborative Technology Alliance will research and develop advanced robotic equipment for use in urban environments and complex terrain, such as mountains and caves. The alliance will create an autonomous, multifunctional collection of miniature intelligence-gathering robots that can operate in places too inaccessible or dangerous for humans.
MAST will advance fundamental science and technology for future robotic systems in several key areas, including small-scale aeromechanics and ambulation; propulsion; sensing, processing and communications; navigation and control; microdevices and integration; platform packaging; and systems architectures.
The Alliance has a planned duration of five years with an option to extend for an additional five years. MAST consists of four primary research areas, led by four principal alliance members: BAE Systems will lead Microsystems Integration, the University of Michigan will lead Microelectronics, the University of Maryland will lead Microsystem Mechanics, and the University of Pennsylvania will lead Processing for Autonomous Operation.
The alliance also has five general members participating in one or more of the research areas: the University of California at Berkeley, the California Institute of Technology and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Georgia Institute of Technology, the University of New Mexico, and North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University.
The non-line-of-sight launch system has completed the first of multiple summer tests, meeting all mission requirements.
The
An AFOSR-funded research team from the University of Southern California (USC) is creating superbots, self-reconfigurable robots that can change their logical or physical configurations and alter their locomotion and manipulation.
Dr. Wei-Men Shen, director of Polymorphic Robotics Laboratory, the associate director of the Centre for Robotics and Embedded Systems, and a research associate professor in computer science at USC is leading the team in SuperBot research. Already, they have found the robots to be versatile, self-healing, metamorphic machines that cost minimally to duplicate.
Officials at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum unveiled a new exhibit April 24 of military unmanned aerial vehicles representing each branch of service.
Of the six UAVs on display, three artifacts came from the U.S. Air Force:
-