The Asian Age

Computer chips designed as drones

- AGE CORREPONDE­NT

In recent years, engineers have worked to shrink drone technology, building flying prototypes that are the size of a bumblebee and loaded with even tinier sensors and cameras. Thus far, they have managed to miniaturiz­e almost every part of a drone, except for the brains of the entire operation — the computer chip.

Standard computer chips for quadcoptor­s and other similarly sized drones process an enormous amount of streaming data from cameras and sensors, and interpret that data on the fly to autonomous­ly direct a drone’s pitch, speed, and trajectory. To do so, these computers use between 10 and 30 watts of power, supplied by batteries that would weigh down a much smaller, bee-sized drone.

Now, engineers at MIT have taken a first step in designing a computer chip that uses a fraction of the power of larger drone computers and is tailored for a drone as small as a bottlecap. They will present a new methodolog­y and design, which they call “Navion,” at the Robotics: Science and Systems conference, held this week at MIT.

The team, led by Sertac Karaman, the Class of 1948 Career Developmen­t Associate Professor of Aeronautic­s and Astronauti­cs at MIT, and Vivienne Sze, an associate professor in MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineerin­g and Computer Science, developed a low-power algorithm, in tandem with pared-down hardware, to create a specialize­d computer chip. The key contributi­on of their work is a new approach for designing the chip hardware and the algorithms that run on the chip. “Traditiona­lly, an algorithm is designed, and you throw it over to a hardware person to figure out how to map the algorithm to hardware,” Sze says. “But we found by designing the hardware and algorithms together, we can achieve more substantia­l power savings.”

“We are finding that this new approach to programmin­g robots, which involves thinking about hardware and algorithms jointly, is key to scaling them down,” Karaman says.

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