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The Scarab Project

  • Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) is an active research field in the robotics community. Despite recent advances for many open research questions, these kind of systems are not widely used in real rescue missions. One reason is that such systems are complex and not (yet) very reliable; another is that one has to be an robotic expert to run such a system. Moreover, available rescue robots are very expensive and the benefits of using them are still limited. In this paper, we present the Scarab robot, an alternative design for a USAR robot. The robot is light weight, humanpackable and its primary purpose is that of extending the rescuer’s capability to sense the disaster site. The idea is that a responder throws the robot to a certain spot. The robot survives the impact with the ground and relays sensor data such as camera images or thermal images to the responder’s hand-held control unit from which the robot can be remotely controlled.

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Metadaten
Author:Tracy Booysen, Thomas Mathew, Greig Knox, W. K. Fong, Marcel Stüttgen, Alexander FerreinORCiD, Gerald Steinbauer
DOI:https://doi.org/10.21269/7537
Parent Title (English):ICRA 2015 Developing Countries Forum
Document Type:Conference Proceeding
Language:English
Year of Completion:2015
Publishing Institution:Fachhochschule Aachen
Date of the Publication (Server):2016/02/01
Length:3 S.
Zugriffsart:weltweit
Institutes:FH Aachen / Fachbereich Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik
FH Aachen / MASKOR Institut für Mobile Autonome Systeme und Kognitive Robotik