Hyperion Rover, 1 km On One Command 206
An anonymous reader writes "Carnegie Mellon's next generation robot just finished its Chilean expedition and achieved a new planetary exploration benchmark, including being the first autonomous rover to cover 1 km on a single command. The other milestones from the Atacama Desert, Chile--the driest place on the planet--centered on over-the-horizon stereo navigation, sun-tracking for efficient solar panel pointing, and fault recovery. CMU shows pictures
of the robot, called Hyperion, in action. One of its prime objectives was to plot courses that avoid shade, by finding the position of virtually everything in the solar system."
It has to What Now? (Score:5, Funny)
I mean, I've heard of over-engineered. But really folks? : ) That's Scalability.
Re:It has to What Now? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It has to What Now? (Score:5, Insightful)
And yes, I read the link, it says nothing about this. Perhaps submissions by anonymous deserve a little more editing.
Re:It has to What Now? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It has to What Now? (Score:2)
A much better solution is for the rover to have an idea of when it's likely to go dark without being able to do anything about it.
Re:It has to What Now? (Score:2)
Moving is probably one of the most power hungry activities that it can do.
Only thing I could think of... (Score:5, Funny)
"Response from Hyperion: Cannot execute command, busy navigating 4000km to east to avoid total solar eclipse in 2004".
Re:Only thing I could think of... (Score:2, Funny)
Scary...
Re:Somewhere in that thought... (Score:2)
Actually not such a bad film...
The concept has been thought out (Score:2)
A single city is built on the surface of Mercury, and is mounted on rails that encircle the entire planet. The sheer force of the thermal expansion of the rails is enough to keep the city perpetually moving away from the light side.
And no, you DON'T want to be on the lit side of Mercury.
Re:The concept has been thought out (Score:2)
Grab.
Re:The concept has been thought out (Score:2)
It starts at Part 11: Viriditas. I have the paperback edition, and it starts on page 487.
Zo sat at the back of a room full of diplomats, looking out the window at Terminator as the oval city rolled majestically over the blasted wastelands of Mercury...
If it WAS a concept borrowed from an earlier short story, it's wonderfully integrated into the whole spread of the Martian concept across all voids.
Re:It has to What Now? (Score:5, Informative)
The submitter was a little overzealous in assuming it checks the position of everything in the solar system for overlap.
Avoid shade? Hm. (Score:3, Funny)
I hope they find it another way to navigate before they send it out to rescue lost hikers in Death Valley, etc..
- "Oh, thank God you found me, RoboSaviour!"
- "YES MY SECOND PRIME DIRECTIVE IS TO HELP HUMANKIND. DO NOT FEAR I WILL CARRY YOU TO A HOSPITAL ESTIMATED TIME TO ARRIVAL 62 HOURS"
- "Wait, second directive? And, uh, wouldn't it be safer for us to travel at night?"
- "HERE WE GO, SIR. ESTIMATED ARRIVAL CONDITION: TENDER, EXTRA-CRISP
That's impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That's impressive (Score:4, Insightful)
The setup simply looks too flimsy (assembled out of two bikes?) to go over any significant obstacles.
I do not doubt that the tracking system, etc. are impressive - they've just got to hook them onto a decent base and send it across a more challenging landscape. On the other hand that will seem like a military application then
Re:That's impressive (Score:2, Informative)
In this context, there were no great terrain obstacles.
Re:That's impressive (Score:5, Funny)
I built an autonomous rover out of a Tonka dumptruck once. It could also travel a kilometer on one command. The command just happened to be the ignition switch to the rocket I had strapped to it.
Re:That's impressive (Score:3, Funny)
Willy Coyote would sure like to get his hands on your rover.
Re:That's impressive (Score:2, Interesting)
(Also look at the linked page with the BB gatling gun [pipersprec...oducts.com]).
Re:That's impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That's impressive (Score:3, Funny)
Everything? (Score:3, Funny)
Even...Uranus?
Re:Everything? (Score:4, Funny)
"Even...Uranus?"
Don't worry, it is programmed to avoid shade so it won't go where the Sun doesn't shine.
Now if it could find the position of my keys in the morning that would be nice (I'm almost certain that they are in the solar system so it shouldn't be a problem).
Re:Everything? (Score:2)
>
> Don't worry, it is programmed to avoid shade so it won't go where the Sun doesn't shine.
"And how does this help me?"
- The Goatse Guy.
Re:Everything? (Score:2)
> > Don't worry, it is programmed to avoid shade so it won't go where the Sun doesn't shine.
> "And how does this help me?"
> - The Goatse Guy.
It helps you because the sun shines there for you.
Stop mixing apples and oranges! (Score:4, Funny)
Hyperion Rover, 1 km On One Command
Posted by Hemos on Monday July 28, @10:56AM
from the planning-ahead dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Carnegie Mellon's next generation robot just finished its Chilean expedition and achieved a new planetary exploration benchmark, including being the first autonomous rover to cover 1 km on a single command. The other milestones from the Atacama Desert, Chile--the driest place on the planet--centered on over-the-horizon stereo navigation, sun-tracking for efficient solar panel pointing, and fault recovery. CMU shows pictures of the robot, called Hyperion, in action. One of its prime objectives was to plot courses that avoid shade, by finding the position of virtually everything in the solar system."
Shouldn't that be kilometerstones?
Easy to beat (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Easy to beat (Score:1)
Yes, but.. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yes, but.. (Score:2)
But he's only a crappy level 23 wizard.
Re:Yes, but.. (Score:2)
Earth is too back-water a planet to be able to find one in the solar system so due the the unfortunate limitations of this robot it seems unlikely. Can't people have a bit of foresight when they construct things nowadays?
Not impressed... (Score:2, Funny)
This 'new' model doesn't even have a "Photon" Cannon! [bu.edu]
Not the driest place on Earth (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:1, Offtopic)
Any questions ?
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:2)
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:5, Informative)
"The Dry Valleys are from north to south Victoria, Wright and Taylor, and they are unusual in as much as no rain has fallen there for at least two million years. They have no ice or snow either because the air is too dry for any to exist (ice-free spaces in the Antarctic are called oases). They are enormous, desolate places covering around 3000 sq km (1170 sq mi) and were first happened upon by Robert Scott in December 1903. He wrote '...we have seen no living thing, not even a moss or a lichen...it certainly is the valley of the dead; even the great glacier that once pushed through it has withered away'."
From the Lonely Planet guide [lonelyplanet.com] (for those who want to holiday there).
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:2)
Humidity? In Antarctica? It's kinda hard to keep water in any phase more energetic than solid when you're dealing with tempuratures beyond -40.
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:2)
Evidence? It doesn't take long to find support both ways, but the numbers seem to fall on the side of Chile, because percipitation DOES happen in the central regions of Antartica, but its always frozen, and always blown away before it can be measured.
I'm not sure I'd agree that is the same as "no percipitation".
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:2)
It is a narrowly held misconception that ice is dry.
(Apologies for the cheap laugh. Cool trivia tidbit, that...)
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:1)
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:5, Informative)
One interior region of the Antarctic is known as The Dry Valleys. These valleys have not seen rainfall in over two million years. With the exception of one valley, whose lakes are briefly filled with water by inland flowing rivers during the summer, the Dry Valleys contain no moisture (water, ice, or snow).
Please see the following as well:
http://www.atmos.umd.edu/~owen/MD2001/ANTA
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:2)
Here's a clickable link. [umd.edu]
Re:Not the driest place on Earth (Score:1)
hmmm... I don't know. Do you have any numbers on precipitation in the center of the pacific ocean? I don't recall seeing any rain there either. But seriously... no precipitation for 10,000 years? It's a) nice to know somebody's been keeping track *that long* and b) it's kinda weird to see a place made mostly of *ice* and covered with *snow* running for "dry". :)
And on a side note, the Atacama desert is beautiful when it rains. Lots of really hardy seeds live in the desert, and when it rains the desert blo
cool ! (Score:3, Insightful)
It's funny how if you look back at the turn of the century there was no legal barrier to try out new technological stuff, but just try to imagine the then inventors of automobiles selling their first rickety inventions in todays unbelievably hostile legal climate. The whole technological and transportation revolution would simply not have happened
That's why we see robots for use on other planets, but we'll probably not see them on this one (unless of course we ship all the lawyers to some other planet first).
Re:cool ! (Score:3, Funny)
Does is have to be a planet, or can we aim it at any stellar body [about.com]?
Re:cool ! (Score:2)
Consider this: an American corporation came up with a pretty good idea for a low cost windmill but because they can not get product liability insurance (pretty much a must in todays climate) the product got axed. Makes you weep.
Re:cool ! (Score:2, Funny)
Ok, I dont see this as a major stumbling block, nor do I know of any human beings who would object too much.
"Get Moose and Squirrel!"
Re:cool ! (Score:1)
With modern design tools, such as CAD/CAM and computerized milling machines, there is almost no excuse for building anything rickety or unproven. Some time ago
Re:cool ! (Score:2)
What the hell is little Cindy doing in a meat locker?
Re:cool ! (Score:5, Insightful)
Around the turn of the century people accepted that new technologies and their development incurred a certain amount of risk taking on the part of the public, nowadays we expect to be absolutely safe from the cradle to the grave.
Lawyers have heavily capitalized on this (especially in the US) with all kinds of bogus lawsuits about product 'failures' (you probably know the various examples as well as I do.)
This is keeping a whole pile of potentially interesting devices of the market or from being developed at all because the would be developers feel that actually selling their work would expose them to all kinds of harm (especially if they are somewhat successful).
The 'I'll sue you' attitude is becoming more and more widespread and is having an ever stifling effect on development.
The only way we are going to go forward is by making mistakes (accidents) and taking risk, not by taking a risk, getting into an accident and then to sue left right and center just to either make a buck or to soothe some inner child that feels wronged.
Large corporations see the new legal culture as a new form of tax, smaller corporations simply go under (or never even get off the ground).
It's evident that robotic technology will initially at least lead to all kinds of exposure to risk, especially if we let the devices loose in our urban jungles. But if we do not then we'll never learn what to fix, and the development will be slowed down to the point where you'll be hard put to mark any progress at all since a device will have to be absolutely bullet proofed before it can be sold.
Re:cool ! (Score:2)
Re:cool ! (Score:2)
So, we will have a near perfect robotic driver, and yet it will not be marketed simply because the first accident by a 'grieved' party will be able to claim 'it's your robot that did it', and the companies insurance company will be forced to pay thro
Re:cool ! (Score:2)
I see it the other way. The robot driver will have a black box, it will say object A was detected traveling at 45mph at a vector that corresponds to the parking lot entrance, I applied max braking force (proven to be 20% more effective than a human could be). The other driver will so no, I came to a compl
Re:cool ! (Score:2)
I very much want this tech to happen.
cheers !
j.
Mods already? (Score:2)
http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/atacama/gallery/03Rob
Re:Mods already? (Score:2, Funny)
Impressive. (Score:5, Funny)
We're looking for a manager at the moment with a lot of those skills.
But seriously, folks. This is quite cool. Its capabilities at the moment seem to surpass by far those of the mars bots that are currently wending their way through space. Am I missing something, though, or have most of those experiments nothing to do with astrobiology? Not a cavil, just wondering.
Re:Impressive. (Score:2)
Anybody can put beefy shocks and knobby tires on a robot, but if all the robot can do is go forward until it runs out of juice, well, big whup.
Perfect... (Score:4, Interesting)
But the problem being it begins to raise questions about the future, if we model a machine after ourselves so much will it be our demise? Science fiction has a way of blowing things out of proportion. When we first started seeing atomic weapons there was a fear we'd destroy the world over and over again, but we haven't yet.
I think the more we learn to understand ourselves the closer we are to advancing the human race to the next level of existance.
"Forget about exploring space, we still don't have the slightest clue about our own bodies".
Re:Perfect... (Score:1)
Avoid Shady Spots? (Score:1)
wow (Score:1)
Colin McRae eat your heart out.
Position tracking (Score:2, Interesting)
Stereo navigation? (Score:5, Funny)
That's like when you can hear boy racers in their Escorts before you can see them, right?
The one command.. (Score:1)
Tommy the Turtle can already do this! (Score:2, Funny)
plot courses that avoid shade... (Score:1, Funny)
Why Chile? (Score:2)
Re:Why Chile? (Score:3, Funny)
I just wonder if they really needed to go there or if they just wanted an excuse to go to the driest place on earth?
Then why didn't they just go to Utah?
Scary next-gen (Score:5, Funny)
Shrike Rover, 1k Slaughtered On One Command
new breakthrough? (Score:1)
The developers probably have fun, though
My lego mindstorms have been running around in my appartment for a while now, and I haven't given it an instruction for weeks (besides changing batteries and turning it on)
Is it up to the DARPA challenge? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is it up to the DARPA challenge? (Score:2)
Re:Is it up to the DARPA challenge? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Is it up to the DARPA challenge? (Score:2)
Once the bad guys knew the price of the prototype, and knew it was on its own, itd be stolen.
I can do that with by Big Track (Score:1)
For a little flare, have it fire once halfway there.
And I don't even need to avoid shadows!
Of course, I am limited to I-70 in Kansas and the thing keeps getting squashed by semi-trucks. That's the only reason they beat me to the record.
Get One For Yourself! (Score:5, Funny)
I tried this (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Get One For Yourself! (Score:2)
1- Fly to Chile
2- Go to the Atacama desert
3- Hide behind a dune
4- Wait for rover to trundle by
5- Steal rover
6- ?????????
7- PROFIT !!!
Love the fact that they linked to a definition of (Score:1)
Straightening things out... (Score:2)
Dry Valleys, Antarctica, probably beat it by several hundreds of thousands years without any kind of water. (be it snow, ground water or air humidity)
2004 models are already out (Score:2)
Stereo navigation? (Score:2, Funny)
That's so NASA (Score:2)
Autonomous ground vehicles have traversed more than a kilometer on a single command before. Several of CMU's Navlab vehicles have done that. The military "Demo III" robot vehicles have done that. In rougher terrain, too.
Hyperion is a neat little machine, but it's not that exotic. It doesn't do "over the horizon stereo navigation". Its stereo system has a useful range of abo
DARPA Grand Challenge - Join Team Overbot (Score:5, Interesting)
We have to do a lot better than Hyperion did. 300km, not one. And faster.
We're looking for a few good people. Hard work, no pay, some risk, a chance for a fraction of the prize. See our current openings. [overbot.com]
We're in Silicon Valley. We have funding, a shop in an industrial park in Redwood City, a vehicle under construction, and six people. We need about six more.
Re:DARPA Grand Challenge - Join Team Overbot (Score:2)
Re:DARPA Grand Challenge - Join Team Overbot (Score:2)
From your website:
"Help build America's Robot Army!"
So, let's get this straight... you're trying to create a robot that's going to be used in miliary applications to kill people. The army will no longer need to send thinking humans into battle, it can just send these, preprogrammed with specific targets, and a path to get there. It won't need human intervention to fire beca
Re:DARPA Grand Challenge - Join Team Overbot (Score:2)
Funny, isn't it? One million dollars from DARPA to build a high-speed autonomous killing machine. Zero dollars from NASA to build a high-speed autonomous planetary exploration machine.
Nice to see where US government priorities lie.
Re:DARPA Grand Challenge - Join Team Overbot (Score:2)
Shade Avoidance (Score:2, Funny)
Um, to my knowledge there isn't a single tree in that desert. How do they know it was successful? I am sure they will claim a 100% success, just as I can claim a 100% success when testing my coffee cup's new "don't move" feature. Yep, it worked. It's right where I left it.
Personal Probe (Score:2, Funny)
mission scrapped (Score:2)
Good... (Score:2)
Soon enough, we will be bowing to the robot overlords! BOW BEFORE YOUR MASTER!
Johnny 1? (Score:2, Funny)
Now I understand why such a thing would go as to track "the position of virtually everything in the solar system," input Stephanie!
Casemods already?!? (Score:2)
http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/atacama/gallery/03Rob
Did anyone else... (Score:2)
Man, that's way bigger than I thought it was... amazing what your brain can do when it has no near objects to compare something to.
Grand Theft Rover (Score:2)
Q.
Re:Sun Guided (Score:2, Insightful)