
ROBART III (1992-)
ROBART III is intended to be an advanced demonstration
platform for non-lethal response measures, effectively extending the reflexive
teleoperated control concepts developed on ROBART II into the realm of
coordinated weapon control. The basic issue to be addressed is the relative
difficulty associated with effectively controlling a mobile robot equipped with
a surveillance and/or targeting camera and an articulated weapon system.
Experience gained through actual use by law enforcement
personnel of conventional teleoperated devices of this type has revealed
considerable shortcomings from a man/machine interface point of view. Simply
put, if a remote operator has to master simultaneous manipulation of three
different joysticks (i.e., one for drive and steering, another for camera pan
and tilt, and yet a third for weapons control), the chances of hitting a moving
target are minimal. In actuality, the single task of simply driving a
teleoperated platform using vehicle-based video feedback is no trivial matter,
and can be stressful and fatiguing even under very favorable conditions.
The innovative thrust behind the ROBART III development is an
extension of ROBART II's reflexive teleoperated control concept one step
further, incorporating sensor-assisted weapon control into the integrated
package. The philosophy basically involves first making two of the three
controllable elements (i.e., drive control, camera control, and weapon control)
slaves to the third, so the human operator only has to deal with one entity.
For example, the surveillance camera can be slaved to the weapon, so that the
camera looks wherever the operator points the gun. If either the weapon
pan-axis controller or the camera pan-axis controller approach their respective
limits of allowable travel, the robot's drive controller causes the mobility
base to rotate in place in the proper direction to restore the necessary range
of motion. Alternatively, the weapon could be slaved to the surveillance
camera, and so forth. In all cases, final closed-loop control of weapon
pan-and-tilt can be provided by the video motion detector and other on-board
sensors.
ROBART III's head-mounted sensors include two Polaroid sonar
transducers, a Banner near-infrared proximity sensor, an AM Sensors microwave
motion detector, and a video surveillance camera. The output of the CCD camera
is broadcast to the operator over an analog RF link and simultaneously fed to
an onboard video motion detector that provides azimuthal data allowing the head
pan-axis controller to automatically track a moving target. Azimuthal and
elevation information from the motion detector will be similarly fed to the
pan-and-tilt controller for the six-barrel pneumatically fired dart gun for
purposes of automated weapon positioning. Additional Polaroid sensors and
near-infrared proximity detectors are strategically located to provide full
collision avoidance coverage in support of the advanced teleoperation features
desired.
The
non-lethal-response weapon chosen for incorporation into the system consists of
a pneumatically powered dart gun capable of firing a variety of 3/16-inch
diameter projectiles. The simulated tranquilizer darts were developed to
demonstrate a potential response application involving remote firing of
temporarily incapacitating rounds by law enforcement personnel. The
demonstration darts consist of a sharpened 20-gauge spring-steel wires
approximately 3 inches long and terminated with 3/16-inch plastic balls. A
rotating-barrel arrangement was incorporated to allow for multiple firings
(six) with minimal mechanical complexity. (The spinning-barrel mechanism also
imparts a rather sobering psychological message during system initialization.)

(courtesy Todd Everett)
The darts are expelled at high velocity from their 12-inch
barrels by a release of compressed air from a pressurized accumulator at the
rear of the gun assembly. To minimize air loss, the solenoid-operated valve
linking the gun accumulator to the active barrel is opened under computer
control for precisely the amount of time required to expel the projectile. The
gun accumulator is monitored by a Micro Switch 242PC150G electronic
pressure transducer, and maintained at a constant pressure of 120 psi by a
second solenoid valve connected to a 150-psi air source. All six darts can thus
be fired in rapid succession (approximately 1.5 seconds) under highly
repeatable launch conditions to ensure accurate performance. A visible-red
laser sight is provided to facilitate manual operation under joystick control
using video relayed from the head-mounted camera.
The
left and right drive tracks are fashioned from 2.5-inch rubber timing belts
turned inside out, driven by a pair of 12-volt electric wheelchair motors
identical to those used on ROBART II. System
power is supplied by a 80-amphour 12-volt gel-cell battery which provides for
several hours of continuous operation between charges. A three-axis Precision
Navigation TCM Electronic Compass Module provides magnetic heading,
temperature, and vehicle attitude (pitch and roll) information to the remote
operator. Full-duplex data communication with the PC-based host control station
is accomplished via a 9600-baud Telesystems spread-spectrum RF link.
For increased versatility as a response vehicle, the
navigation scheme has been specifically modified to support supervised
autonomous operation in previously unexplored interior structures. A
"human-centered mapping" strategy is employed to ensure valid first-time
interpretation of navigational landmarks as the robot builds its world model.
The accuracy of the robots real-time position estimation (and ultimately
the model representation) is significantly enhanced by an innovative algorithm
which exploits the fact that the majority of man-made structures are
characterized by parallel and orthogonal walls.
Recently a research thrust has been started involving ROBART
III in a distributed master/slave network, partly to address the communication
degradation problem as ROBART III explores a building. A group of slave robots
would follow ROBART III into a building and be deployed at strategic locations
to serve as communication relays, rearguard lookouts, expendable point men, or
part of a distributed sensor network, preventing an intruder from playing
"hide-and-seek" with ROBART III. A fleet of ten Lynxmotion Hexapod II
walking robots (six-legged, twelve-servo hexapods featuring two
degrees-of-freedom per leg) are currently used to illustrate the feasibility of
the master/slave network. The small slave robots perform collision-avoidance,
wall-following, and doorway-detection routines using algorithms similar to
those running on ROBART III. For all other tasks, the slaves react to
information that has been gathered and preprocessed by ROBART III.
For more information
on Robart III, see:
- Ciccimaro, D.A., H.R. Everett, M.H. Bruch, and C.B.
Phillips, "A Supervised Autonomous Security Response Robot," American Nuclear
Society 8th International Topical Meeting on Robotics and Remote Systems
(ANS'99), Pittsburgh, PA, 25-29 April, 1999.
[PDF (367 KB)]
- Ciccimaro, D.A., H.R. Everett, G.A. Gilbreath, and T.T.
Tran, "An Automated Security Response Robot," SPIE Proc. 3525: Mobile Robots
XIII and Intelligent Transportation Systems, Boston, Massachusetts, 1-5
November 1998. [PDF
(1295 KB)]
- Everett, H.R. and D. W. Gage, "A Third Generation
Security Robot," SPIE Mobile Robot and Automated Vehicle Control Systems,
Boston, MA, 20-21 November 1996, Vol. 2903.
MPEG
movie: RobartCop faces 3 Coke cans, Western style (1.2MB).
MPEG
movie of Robart III shooting darts at a balloon (400K).
References:
- Everett, H.R., "A Computer Controlled Sentry Robot,"
Robotics Age, March/April 1982a.
- Everett, H.R., "A Microprocessor Controlled Autonomous
Sentry Robot," Masters Thesis, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA, October
1982b.
- Everett, H.R., et al., "Modeling the Environment of a
Mobile Security Robot," Technical Document 1835, Naval Command, Control and
Ocean Surveillance Center, San Diego, CA, June 1990.
- Gilbreath, G.A., Everett, H.R., "Path Planning and
Collision Avoidance for an Indoor Security Robot," SPIE Mobile Robots III,
Cambridge, MA, pp. 19-27, November, 1988.
- Laird, R.T., Everett, H.R., "Reflexive Teleoperated
Control," Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems, Dayton, OH, July, 1990.
- Smurlo, R.P., Everett, H.R., "Intelligent Sensor Fusion for
a Mobile Security Robot," Sensors, pp. 18-28, June, 1993.
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