In a Washington Business Park, DARPA is Testing Robots Underground by Kelsey D. Atherton - C4ISRNET
Elma, Washington, with an estimated population of 3,092, is hardly the foremost example of an urban battlefield, but it does offer a nearby business park, settled into the bones of a never-used nuclear power plant.
For military planners who fear future conflicts in megacities, Elma provides a near ideal testing ground: an urban environment without the difficulties of an inhabited urban space.
This week, the Satsop business park outside the city, was host to the next chapter of the Subterranean Challenge by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. The explicit goal of the event was to “develop innovative technologies that would augment operations underground.” In practice that means testing robots, often teams of robots, and the software to navigate unknown environments. Mapping is a necessary but insufficient part of the process. For the challenges, the robots must locate specific artifacts, and then record their position within 5 meters.
The event offers prize money, but also a way to help ensure the military will one day have the the technology it needs. C4ISRNET attended the event this week…
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DARPA is testing robots…
DARPA is testing robots underground, where the pressure is 100 times that of Earth's surface. The agency's subterranean robot laboratory is located near Houston's Washington Business Park and will be used to test robots that can work in extreme environments. I would really want to go to the best NJ online casino no deposit bonus site where I will also be learning about the fast development of the MLS and what role big sponsorship play it.