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Category Archives: Robotics
FIRST Robotics held areas first competition at UNC Pembroke – WBTW – Myrtle Beach and Florence SC
Posted: August 6, 2017 at 3:11 am
PEMBROKE, NC(WBTW) FIRST robotics hosted its Thundering Herd Of Robots competition atUNC Pembroke. This is the counties first-ever THOR event.
The event included 13 teams of high school students from around North Carolina who gathered during the off-season to compete Saturday. During the competition students competed by building robots they designed, build, programmed and tested in only six weeks.
They also qualify for scholarships at nearly 200 colleges or universities by participating in the FIRST robotics competitions.
Organizers told News13, the students not only get tolearn team building skills,but they alsogain the skills they need in future careers.
There is multiple sides to this, theres engineering and business, said Joshua Carlile, a competitor from Robeson Early College High School.You learn pretty much everything, electronics, programming quick thinking of course, and actually building added Carlile.
FIRST North Carolina is a nonprofit organization created to inspire youth to pursue careers in science and technology and to help them acquire the skills to compete in a technologically-driven economy.
FIRST robotics is always looking for mentors or sponsors for robotics teams, to learn more about first robotics click here.
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‘These Honduran students changed my life’ – MyDaytonDailyNews
Posted: August 5, 2017 at 6:22 am
BEAVERCREEK
Seven High School students from Honduras participated in the FIRST Global Robotics Competition in Washington, D.C., with the help of Dayton-based nonprofit Shoulder to Shoulder.
RELATED: Marching band goes through intense camp
Shoulder to Shoulders 27-year mission has been to help bring sustainable health, nutrition and education services to the people of rural Honduras.
While in the U.S. the students also had the opportunity to spend time with students at Jacob Coy Middle School in Beavercreek as well as meet other local robotics teams.
The Honduran robotics team developed a connection with the Beavercreek students when Beavercreek middle school Spanish teacher Angel Allen had the opportunity to visit Honduras and tour the Good Shepherd Bilingual School as well as Santo Tomas Aquino High School, in Camasca, Honduras.
When Allen found out that the team would be in the U.S. for the competition she saw it as an opportunity for her own students.
These Honduran students changed my life. I was able to see how they are happy with so little. I want my Beavercreek students to find value out of the small things and recognize that you can create your own happiness, said Allen.
With the help of Shoulder to Shoulder, local fundraising and local families willing to host the students and their teachers the team was able to make the detour to Beavercreek.
Host mom Lynn Hay said that her daughter is part of Allens eighth-grade Spanish class and really wanted to participate as a host family.
My daughter got the opportunity to see life though their eyes. She got to know about them, their families, their culture and lifestyle. If you have kids, its definitely worth opening them up to experiences like this. They are so used their lifestyle, and all that matters is the next new phone. They dont know what its like to live when you are taking showers out of a bucket, said Hay.
Hay said she was so impressed with the Honduran students and all the barriers they had to overcome to get to the point that they were.
She said that they recounted a story about a representative from the robotics competition who traveled to Honduras for a week to give the team a bit of instruction on the competition kit.
He didnt speak Spanish so he had to communicate with them through an interpreter. He tried to explain how to use the controller by telling them it was just like using a PlayStation. The interpreter had to explain that these kids had never seen a PlayStation, said Hay.
The team traveled to Washington, D.C., on July 16-18 for the robotics competition. The Olympics-style robotics challenge invites one team from each country across the globe with the goal of inspiring a passion for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.
Each group of students is given a kit and is asked to solve a set of challenges using only the tools and parts provided to them.
Team student representative Melissa Lemus said that Shoulder to Shoulder not only helped them financially but also with encouragement. She said they had never done anything with robotics before and didnt think that they could do this.
At the competition in Washington, D.C., Lemus said that she was surprised how differently each team approached the project even though they all had the same materials to work with.
All and all she said that the experience was very positive one and was amazed by the opportunities this country had to offer. This is an experience that will stay with me and have a positive impact on the rest of my life, Lemus said.
Contact this contributing writer at Erica.Harrah@woh.rr.com.
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Students’ robots fly into 3M headquarters – Minnesota Public Radio News
Posted: at 6:21 am
A couple of dozen robots briefly took over the plaza at 3M's Maplewood headquarters Friday, as Minnesota high school robotics teams showed off their machines.
3M scientists, engineers and other employees serve as mentors to hundreds of students on local robotics teams.
Hans Mueller, a member of the Eagan High School robotics team, said his experience with the team and counsel from 3M workers put him on the path toward an industrial engineering degree.
"Here at 3M, I met with several employees throughout my experience in robotics, who helped me decide what I wanted to do," Mueller said. "So, it really enabled me to pick the career I want to go on to do."
3M provides more than $1 million a year in equipment and donations to robotics teams worldwide.
Inventor and entrepreneur Dean Kamen founded FIRST Robotics and was present for the event Friday. He said Minnesota is a national leader with some 200 robotics teams, but he wants to see more teams here and across the country.
"This is the only sport where every kid can turn pro and it should be the sport that every school has," Kamen said. "This sport leads to careers, life changing opportunities and we need to make it more available to more kids everywhere."
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Father of Afghan Robotics Team Captain Is Killed in Suicide Bombing – New York Times
Posted: August 4, 2017 at 1:16 pm
Most of the dead were buried on Wednesday at Ziarat Sultan Agha cemetery. Thousands of mourners, grieving aloud and chanting prayers, accompanied the coffins of the victims, who ranged from a man in his 70s to a 3-year-old child who had accompanied his father to prayer.
We never had such a big crowd for funerals; people came from all ethnic groups and religious sects, said Qudos Yassenzada, a local elder on the committee that helped arrange the burials.
The Afghan robotics team attracted international attention after its members visa requests to attend First Global, a competition with participants from 150 countries, were rejected twice.
After a public outcry, President Trump reportedly intervened to let them travel to the United States. Ivanka Trump, the presidents daughter and adviser, met with the team and said it was a privilege and an honor to have you all with us.
The team was awarded a silver medal for courageous achievement.
I am so excited, and very, very happy, Fatemah said at the competition, turning the medal over in her hands. I still cant believe this happened.
The girls returned home to a heroes welcome, with leaders holding receptions for them and awarding them plaques.
Their success shows that Afghan girls, despite the challenges, can be good inspirations in the field of knowledge and technology, President Ashraf Ghani said in congratulating the team.
Ten days later, Fatemahs father was killed, highlighting how short-lived moments of happiness can be amid the increasing violence taking civilian lives. Fatemah probably had not had a chance to tell all the stories of her trip and the international reception to her father, the BBC Persian site noted.
The attackers, reportedly two of them, entered the mosque as hundreds had gathered for evening prayers. They shot at the worshipers indiscriminately before blowing themselves up. Mr. Qaderyan was shot five times, and his body also had shrapnel wounds, Mr. Yassenzada said.
Upon returning from the United States, Fatemah had expressed concern about the safety of her team, saying the exposure might bring unwanted attention.
We appeared in front of national and international media, and in our country this is still dangerous that Afghan girls appear before the media, she told Abdullah Abdullah, the Afghan governments chief executive. Our security should be looked after.
Mr. Yassenzada said the Qaderyan family was poor, largely relying on the income of one of the sons who has a shop in Herat city.
On Thursday, Fatemah sat at the womens funeral hall in the city, where people had come to pay their respects. She was grieving, flanked by two of her teammates from the robotics team.
A version of this article appears in print on August 4, 2017, on Page A6 of the New York edition with the headline: Bomb Kills Father of Afghan Robotics Team Leader.
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Sun River Rednek Robotics team showcases creations at Montana State Fair – KXLH Helena News
Posted: at 1:16 pm
GREAT FALLS -
The Rednek Robotics team from Sun River beat 128 teams to win the First Tech Competition World Championship back in April.
The winningrobot is designed to pick up3 1/2inch wiffle balls and shoot them in a goal about 4 feet high.
The team wants to demonstrate their winning robot so everyone in the community can see it in person and learn more about the program that they are involved in.
Visitors will have the opportunity todrivethe robot and try to get the wiffle balls in the goal.
Ilaya Payne, a senior in high school that has been with the Robotics team for threeyears, said, "We want to interest students and younger kids to understand that this is available to them when they do get into high school and middle school."
The Robotics team will be at the fair Saturday, August 5th, from 1-6pm.
Sun River Rednek Robotics headed to Worlds Robotic Competition in Texas
Sun River Robotics achieves 1st Place at Worlds Robotics Championship
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Former Drone Rivals DJI, 3D Robotics Link Product Offerings – Aviation International News
Posted: at 1:16 pm
Aviation International News | Former Drone Rivals DJI, 3D Robotics Link Product Offerings Aviation International News Two companies once poised as rivals in the early days of the small-drone industry have linked their product offerings aimed at architectural, engineering and construction (AEC) companies. In a blog post on August 1, 3D Robotics (3DR) of Berkeley ... |
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Father of girl on Afghan robotics team killed in ISIS bombing – CNN International
Posted: August 3, 2017 at 10:20 am
Two suicide bombers blew themselves up after firing on worshippers inside the mosque, a Herat provincial spokesman told CNN.
ISIS took responsibility for the attack Wednesday in a series of messages sent to Telegram channels associated with the group.
The all-girl robotics team flew to the United States in July to take part in an international competition with students from nearly 160 countries.
At the competition, the team received the silver medal in the Raja Cherkaoui el Moursli Award for Courageous Achievement.
In addition, the girls were given congressional records detailing their journey to America by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen.
"You are an inspiration to all of us," the New Hampshire Democrat told them.
Writing Thursday on Twitter, Hamdullah Mohib, Afghanistan's ambassador to the United States, said his heart went out to Fatima for the loss of her father.
"We will defeat the forces trying to dismantle our future," he wrote.
The US Embassy in Afghanistan condemned the attack Thursday as "deplorable."
"We send our deepest condolences to the families and friends of those killed and injured," a statement said. "We commend the government and security forces ... for their response to this latest act of cowardly violence."
Tuesday's bombing was among a series of recent deadly attacks on civilians and armed forces in Afghanistan by terrorist groups.
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Aussies Win Amazon Robotics Challenge – IEEE Spectrum
Posted: at 10:20 am
Photo: Anthony Weate/QUT Peter Corke, director of the Australian Centre for Robotic Vision at Queensland University of Technology, and other members of Team ACRV work on their robot, named Cartman, which won the 2017 Amazon Robotics Challenge in Japan.
Amazon has a problem, and that problem is humans. Amazon needs humans, lots of them. But humans, as we all know, are the most unreasonable part of any business, constantly demanding things like lights and air. So Amazon has turned to robots (over 100,000 of them) for doing tasks likemoving things around in a warehouse.But its proving to be much more difficult to get the robots to do some other tasks. One of the hardest ispicking objects from shelves and bins.
To solve this problem, Amazon is making it someone elses problem, by hosting a yearly robotics pickingchallenge. In the competition,teams have to developrobotics hardware and software that can recognize objects, grasp them, and move them from place to place. This is harder than it sounds, because were on year threeand Amazon is still running this thing, but some clever Australians are making substantial progress.
The 2017 incarnation of the Amazon Robotics Challenge was held at RoboCup in Nagoya last month, and sixteen teams from around the world made the trip to Japan. What Amazon was looking for was a robot that could identify items, remove target items from storage and place them into boxes (picking), take target items from totes and place them into storage (stowing), and then do both at once in a grand fantastic explosion all-or-nothing final competition.
Teams brought their own robots with their own nutty gripper designs, and also their own item storage system designed to be able to handle all of the stuff and junk that crazy people like you buy on Amazon every day. Points were awarded for successful picks, successful stows, neat packing, and overall quickness, while points were deducted for (among other things) major damage to items, which is unfortunate, since a robot that could just flatten everything into a pancake would have a much easier time at this!
Heres an overview of how things went:
Team ACRV (from the Australian Centre for Robotic Vision at Queensland University of Technology in Australia), which didnt place in the top three on either the individual pick task or stow task, managed to knock it out of the park on the combined final task, taking first place and going home with US $80,000 (which is way more in Australia).
Third place went to Singapores Nanyang Technological University, whichmanaged a first in the picking task anda second in the stowing task. And second place went to NimbRo, which posted this video of their final run:
A few things to note from these videos: It looks like most teams used some flavor of hybrid gripper design, relying primarily on suction and using a physical gripping mechanism when necessary. There are also plenty of instances when the first grasping attempt fails, and the robot needs to be able to detect and adapt to that, just like a human does. Additionally, the robots sometimes grasped multiple things at once by accident, or had to deal with objects (like books) that can change their shape post-grasp as they were lifted. These sorts of things are why challenges like these are important: Given the number of objects that Amazon is foisting on us,its hard to predict how any system will perform without trying it out in real life, or as close to real life as challenges like these allow.
While QUTs press release suggests that the team has solved a key robotics problem for Amazon picking items and stowing them in boxes in an unstructured environment, that strikes us as awfully optimistic. Its certainly a key robotics problem, but solving it implies a reliable robotic solution that can compete (at least to some extent) with a human picker, and based on these videos, we seem kind of far from that. Also worth noting is that QUTs winning robot is a stationary gantry system, suggesting that Amazon could perhaps be open to a picking solution that doesnt move, rather than a mobile manipulator.
On the other hand, maybe we shouldnt draw too many conclusions from the specific designs, and just be happy that were seeing some tangible advancements in object recognition, grasp planning, and everything else under conditions that are somewhat close to real-world usefulness. And as soon as Amazon buys up all the winning teams of one of their challenges and then cancels the following year, we might be able to actually figure out what their robotics fulfillment plan is.
[ Amazon Robotics Challenge]
IEEE Spectrums award-winning robotics blog, featuring news, articles, and videos on robots, humanoids, drones, automation, artificial intelligence, and more. Contact us:e.guizzo@ieee.org
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Snap reportedly close to acquiring Chinese drone maker Zero Zero Robotics – CNBC
Posted: at 10:20 am
Snapchat owner Snap Inc is in talks to buy Chinese drone maker Zero Zero Robotics to boost its hardware push, according to media reports.
The deal, which was first reported by The Information, will be between $150 million to $200 million, TechCrunch reported citing a source.
Snap and Zero Zero Robotics have not responded to a request for comment.
Zero Zero Robotics makes a $500 foldable hovering drone that follows you and records video. If the acquisition goes through it would mark the latest move by Snap to double down on hardware after the launch of its video recording sunglasses called Spectacles.
The company, which went public in March to much excitement, has struggled to grow its user base amid stiff competition from Facebook's copycat product Instagram Stories. Shares of the company closed at $13.10 on Tuesday, below the company's $17 initial public offer price.
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Local businesses are at the forefront of the developing robotics world – C-VILLE Weekly
Posted: at 10:20 am
For years, Charlottesville has been quietly becoming a leading tech hub in Virginia and on the East Coast. Meet three of the businesses and programs that are spearheading the charge into the growing field of robotics.
Crozet residents are aware that big things are happening in their town. Foremost among these has been Perrone Robotics Inc.s move to invest in the construction of a new multimillion-dollar downtown complex. While the logistics of the project are still being hashed outfor instance, an estimated $3.15 million in funding for Crozet Plaza, a central park and greenspace, has yet to be securedin December 2016, PRI struck a deal with developer Milestone Partners and, in early July, cut the red ribbon on a temporary 5,000-square-foot office and testing facility located on the site of the proposed construction. Once the plaza goes in, and surrounding offices, residential apartments and restaurants are installed, Perrone plans to build a permanent office and testing facility.
Whats significant about this move? PRI is bringing top-tier Silicone Valley innovation to the Charlottesville area.
Positioned at the forefront of the autonomous car revolution, PRI is seeking to play a key role nationally and globally in its development and implementation. Its not often that you get the opportunity to go to work for a company thats doing things this exciting, and is located in an area thats this beautiful, says Chief Operating Officer Greg Scharer.
For PRI founder Paul Perrone, thats exactly the point. Contrary to the volatility of the Silicon Valley workplacewhere talented employees are constantly jumping ship, chasing the highest bidderPerrone has built a company culture devoted to long-term stability and family values. The people that come to work for us are some of the best and brightest in the world, he says. We want them to be invested in the companys future, love where they live and feel confident they can raise their families in this community. With its proximity to the mountains and Charlottesville, Perrone says Crozet is a perfect fit.
But what exactly does PRI do?
A little over 14 years ago, we started building software that makes autonomous cars work, says Scharer, who explains that PRIs flagship product MAXwhich stands for Mobile Autonomous Xis to autonomous vehicles what Android is to smartphones, or Windows is to computers.
Basically, its a software platform that we use to build other software, he says. Think of it like a foundation, or set of tools that lets you put together a house more swiftly. Just, in the case of MAX, youre building software applications. MAX saves programmers time and energy because they dont have to rebuild things theyd otherwise have to make over and over again when creating applications, and this capability is what allows for hardware independence.
Using MAX, PRI can integrate sensors, controls, algorithms, computer platforms and more. In other words, everything you need to run a fully autonomous vehicle.
Thirteen years ago, Paul Perrone entered his first self-driving car, Tommy, in the nations most prestigious competition for autonomous vehicles: the DARPA Grand Challenge, which is funded by the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (an arm of the U.S. Department of Defense). Back then the company consisted of little more than a makeshift lab in a basement, a couple of volunteers, Tommy and the MAX software platform.
Though Perrone didnt ultimately take home the $2 million prize, participating in the race paid off in two big ways. First, the grueling 150-mile-long remote and driverless run from Los Angeles to Las Vegas through the Mojave Desert tested MAXs real-world capabilities. Second, and perhaps more importantly, after being selected as one of just 40 teams to compete in the contest, Tommys performance against what Perrone describes as an infinitely better-funded field sowed the seeds for PRIs expansion.
The company quickly became a leader in the then-nascent field of autonomous vehicles. However, for the next 12 years, growth was relatively slow. That all changed last fall when PRI received a large investment from Wind River Systems, a subsidiary of Intel. Although exact amounts were not disclosed, the money came as part of a $38 million package split between 12 tech companies (not necessarily evenly), which senior vice president Wendell Brooks described in a statement as allocated to the worlds most visionary entrepreneurs developing breakthrough technologies to transform lives and industries.
According to Perrone, the investment has led to a partnership with Intel, which is enabling PRI to scale up marketing and development for its MAX platform and create new pathways into the global marketplace. Weve met with major European auto manufacturers and, while were not ready to disclose specifics, we expect to announce a major deal very soon, says Scharer.
Meanwhile, the company has added a couple new executives, and has grown to 17 employees. The founder of Atari, inventor of Pong, and renown tech start-up guru Nolan Bushnell has joined PRIs governing board. James Gosling, creator of the Java programming language, recently joined the board of advisers. And starting this year, PRI will add between five and 15 new positions a year for the next five years and may have upward of 120 employees based in Crozet as soon as 2022. These jobs will be top-tier. Well be bringing in highly educated, highly skilled employees, says Perrone.
According to Scharer, these people bring experience and industry know-how to the table, which he says will be invaluable as the company scales up. Nolans been in the IT industry since the beginning and has a proven record of taking technology in its early stages and creating a productive business around it, he says. And James is considered a guru in the coding communityI cant tell you how great it is to have these guys to bounce ideas around with.
Considering PRIs pioneer patent for MAX, and the fact that players such as Google, Uber, Tesla, Volvo, Ford and at least 13 other automakers have committed or implied theyll make fully autonomous vehicles available by 2020, PRIs future looks lucrative. According to a study conducted by worldwide management consulting firm Boston Consulting Group, by 2035 12 million fully autonomous units could be sold a year globally, and the market for partially and fully autonomous vehicles is expected to leap from about $42 billion in 2025 to nearly $77 billion in 2035.
The BCG study also says the growth capacity of the autonomous industry is being driven largely by safety considerations, citing a National Highway Safety Administration report stating that, each year, there are 33,000 to 40,000 traffic fatalities in the U.S. alone, with 747 fatal crashes each week. But once autonomous cars are deployed at scale, Perrone claims traffic fatalities will be reduced by 75 percent, almost instantaneously. With complete standardization, we expect fatalities will drop by another two orders of magnitude, he says.
Moving into the future, both the BCG study and Perrone say autonomy in cars is only going to grow.
We predict that, by 2035, the preponderance of cars will be autonomousand were going to have a major stake in that action, says Scharer. Were working to become the Microsoft of the autonomous car industry. And while that may sound like a lofty goal, its one we feel is attainable.
Since its founding in 2007, WillowTree has made a name for itself in the tech world. As a budding provider of mobile strategy, design and development services, the company has blossomed from a handful of entrepreneurs to having more than 200 employees housed in offices located in Charlottesville and Durham, North Carolina. With $13.2 million in revenue in 2015, the company experienced growth of 226 percent in fewer than three years, and in the past five years has received numerous accolades and awards.
From 2012 to 2016, Inc. Magazine named WillowTree one of the fastest-growing companies in America. Meanwhile, as one of the fastest-growing businesses in the state, the Virginia Chamber of Commerce has presented it with consecutive Fantastic 50 awards since 2013. In 2015, CEO and founder Tobias Dengel was recognized by SmartCEO as helming one of the nations most promising tech companies. And in both 2015 and 2016, WillowTree was awarded International Academy of the Visual Arts Communicator Awards for its work designing mobile apps for Regal Entertainment Group and AOL.
According to WillowTree Chief Experience Officer Blake Sirach, the company helps Fortune 500 companies take advantage of the mobile wave in ways their internal teams and existing consultants cannot. Because of new device capabilities the medium introduces new and near-constant opportunity, and mobile demands design-driven software development, and thats where we excel. As we continue to help companies understand the essential role mobile plays in providing a competitive advantage and better engagement with customers, more and more are turning to us to help guide and implement their mobile strategies.
That last statement is no exaggeration. In addition to AOL and Regal, the companys short list of heavy-hitting clients includes GE, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Johnson & Johnson, Time Warner, AEG, Wyndham and Harvard Business Publishing.
Most recently, WillowTrees work in the growing field of chatbotsor conversational user interfaceshas been garnering tremendous attention. A chatbot is basically an interface that can hold a conversation with a user via auditory or textual methods, says Sirach. Designed to simulate human conversation, the bots are used for tasks such as customer service, trouble-shooting and information acquisition.
According to Sirach, for certain businesses or products, CUIs offer an advantage over traditional apps.For example, say youre chatting with a friend via Facebook Messenger and decide to catch a movie. Only, you dont know whats playing at what time or where, much less what a given film is about. Its one of those situations where itd be great to have a person around who knows all the answers and can cater to your needs exactly, says Sirach. However, thats not often the case. But what if you could simply access a chatbot within the app and, within a couple of questions, get all the info you need? What this example illustrates is the type of problem thats perfect for a CUI to solve.
By the end of the chatbot conversation, not only will you and your friends have decided on a flick, your tickets can be sent directly to you via email, text or natively in the app. Because the information is provided within the interface youre already using, you wont have to download an additional app or pull up a search engine, says Sirach. Which makes for a much more streamlined and friction-free experience.
Moving into the future, Sirach says customized CUIs will offer companies valuable value-added productsand WillowTree tremendous potential for growth. With businesses seeking increasingly engaging interfacesaccording to Business Insider, more than half of all apps downloaded are used only once, with usefulness and engagement holding the key to frequent usehe says the chatbot market is ripe for growth because CUIs enable products and services to be where the users already are.
Chris Goynes students have the good fortune of participating in one of the nations most groundbreaking undergraduate spacecraft design courses. Since 2013, the UVA aerospace engineering professors students have been working with NASA to design research equipment and crafts that travel into the stratosphere and beyond.
Their current project? A three-pound, softball-sized satellite that will spend at least two months orbiting the planet at altitudes equivalent to that of the International Space Stationthat is, a minimum of 1,000 orbits at 250 miles above the Earths surface. Known as the CubeSat, the vessel is part of a three-satellite group slated to be carried into space in late 2018 by a NASA rocket that will resupply the International Space Station. Although the project is being supervised by UVA students, the other two units are being designed and built by students at Old Dominion University and Virginia Tech.
What is the CubeSats mission? According to Goyne, the satellite will take measurements from various altitudes for atmospheric density. Once compiled, the data will aide NASA in its efforts to greater understand global atmospheric properties, and how subtleties in the upper atmosphere work to cause drag on orbiting satellites.
Equipped with a tiny ultra-high frequency radio, the CubeSat will beam the data it collects to a UVA ground-control station. Meanwhile, the station will transmit instructions to the craft and communicate with other satellites in space. Our students will have direct control of our spacecraft, gaining valuable firsthand experience in spacecraft operations, says Goyne. Theyll also control the data received from the spacecraft and handle its distribution and dissemination.
The first UVA-developed and -operated spacecraft, CubeSat is a multi-year project, and is passed down to succeeding groups of fourth-year engineering students as a capstone project or course. The craft is expected to be completed this fall, with about 100 students working on the project across the three schools.
In essence, [they] are walking in the footsteps of famous NASA programs like the Apollo missions, says Goyne. Its a great opportunity for them to participate in a NASA project with real science and technology investigations, and a special experience for them to design, build, test and ultimately fly a craft that actually goes into space.
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Local businesses are at the forefront of the developing robotics world - C-VILLE Weekly
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