麻豆淫院


Roving robot to the rescue

Roving robot to the rescue
Whelan (left), Williams (center) and Bottiglieri (right) created a robot that can find disaster victims through their mobile phones. Credit: Mary Knox Merrill

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- Northeastern University student-researchers have created a roving robot named WiLU that may be able to locate and rescue victims of natural disasters or participate in military missions that are too dangerous for soldiers.

The was developed for a senior capstone project under the direction of electrical and professor Charles DiMarzio and associate professor in the College of Computer and , Guevara Noubir. The team members included electrical and computer Tom Bottiglieri, Spiros Mantzavinos, Travis Taylor, Ryan Whelan and Eric Williams.

WiLU鈥攚hich looks like a Tonka truck鈥攃ould help save the lives of victims of catastrophic disasters, such as the massive 9.0 earthquake that rocked Japan in March, said Whelan.

As he put it, 鈥淵ou could send this into a search and rescue scenario where you don鈥檛 want humans to go.鈥

Noubir sponsored the students and funded the project with a portion of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Major Research Instrumentation grant awarded to him and an interdisciplinary team of professors from Northeastern to develop wireless sensor networks that support key applications such as search and rescue by swarms of robots.

He praised the student鈥檚 innovative robot. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great example of an effective research platform that integrates multi-disciplinary expertise spanning mechanical engineering, RF communications, embedded software development, and algorithms designs."

Students created a complex algorithm that would enable the robot to locate people鈥攐r even bombs that are detonated through mobile phones.

Here鈥檚 how it works: a smart antenna mounted atop WiLU measures the signal strength of a mobile phone that is connected to a wireless network. Then, the robot autonomously determines the location of the object by adaptively forming beams to pinpoint the direction and location of the wireless signal source.

Students, who say humans could also control the robot from remote locations, hope to create a subscription service whereby mobile phone users could automatically join the WiFi network.

鈥淚ncorporating so many different creative and technical skills on a single project is the goal of our Capstone Design course,鈥 DiMarzio said.

Citation: Roving robot to the rescue (2011, July 7) retrieved 7 July 2025 from /news/2011-07-roving-robot.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Warwick students take rescue robot to RoboCup Rescue Championship

0 shares

Feedback to editors