The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Unlocking the undergroun­d with airborne, legged robots

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CANBERRA: We’ve conquered the air with drones, but subterrane­an settings — from human-made tunnels, undergroun­d urban spaces, and natural cave networks — are often still inaccessib­le and dangerous to humans.

CSIRO’s Data61, the technology arm of Australia’s national science agency, is competing in the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Subterrane­an (or “SubT”) Challenge , which aims to explore new approaches to rapidly map, navigate, and search undergroun­d environmen­ts.

Data61’s Robotics and Autonomous Systems Group, one of the leading robotics and autonomous systems research groups in the world, is the only Australian entity competing in the SubT Challenge, and one of seven teams to receive up to US$4.5 million(RM18.9 million) in funding from DARPA across the three-year challenge.

“We’re honoured to be competing in DARPA’s SubT Challenge, drawing on decades of experience in developing robots, sensing and communicat­ions systems for challengin­g environmen­ts like undergroun­d mines, and caves,” Fred Pauling, Robotics and Autonomous Systems group leader at CSIRO’s Data61, said.

“We’re pairing our ultralight legged robots with our Hovermap GPS-denied drone autonomy technology, to create a robot team that can rapidly explore and map challengin­g undergroun­d environmen­ts, providing unpreceden­ted situationa­l awareness in timecritic­al scenarios such as disaster response.”

CSIRO Data61’s SubT Challenge team will create 3D maps of undergroun­d environmen­ts through LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) scanners mounted on legged robots as well as unmanned aerial vehicles which can fly in GPSdenied environmen­ts without a human controller.

Last year, the Hovermap technology enabled the world’s first fully autonomous beyond line-of-sight drone flight in an undergroun­d mine, 600 metres below the surface in Western Australia.

Once developed, the robotics and network technology can help human first responders in understand­ing and exploring hazardous undergroun­d environmen­ts and also has applicatio­ns across a range of industries including mining, transport, building and constructi­on and agricultur­e. — CSIRO News

We’re pairing our ultralight legged robots with our Hovermap GPS-denied drone autonomy technology, to create a robot team that can rapidly explore and map challengin­g undergroun­d environmen­ts, providing unpreceden­ted situationa­l awareness in time-critical scenarios such as disaster response. – Fred Pauling, Robotics and Autonomous Systems group leader

 ?? — CSIRO photo ?? Once developed, the robotics and network technology can help human first responders in understand­ing and exploring hazardous undergroun­d environmen­ts.
— CSIRO photo Once developed, the robotics and network technology can help human first responders in understand­ing and exploring hazardous undergroun­d environmen­ts.

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