Title: What are robots good for?
1What are robots good for?
Examples of Robots from Many Areas
2POLICE ROBOT
- An experimental robot picks up a simulated pipe
bomb during a demonstration for the media at
Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque,
N.M., Tuesday, July 3, 2001. - New technology developed at Sandia National
Laboratories is making bomb disposal easier and
safer for police bomb squads. - Phil Bennett, project leader at Sandia, says the
arm joints of the new robot are more coordinated
than the old-line robots. - (AP Photo/Jake Schoellkopf)
3Example NOMAD ROBOT
- This undated photo from Carnegie Mellon
Uniuversity shows the Nomad robot during its solo
drive on an icy Antartic plain. - The robot, a product of the university's Robotics
Institute, began testing its wheels in January
after it was taken by helicopter to a harsh
region known as Elephant Moraine where it was
left to inspect rocks and look for meteorites. - (AP Photo/Carnegie Mellon U.)
4What are robots good for?
Carnegie Mellons Nomad
5ROBOTIC SURGERY
- Dr. William Franckle watches a video monitor as
he assists in a gall bladder operation using a
robotic surgery machine called da Vinci Surgical
System, left, at Robert Wood Johnson University
Hospital in New Brunswick, N.J., Thursday, Feb.
8, 2001.
- Franckle assited Dr. Andrew Boyarsky who was
manipulating small robotic instruments, one is
seen on monitor, while looking at a
three-dimensional image of the patient's abdomen
from a work station about 10 feet away from the
patient. (AP Photo/Mike Derer)
6HURRICANE SEASON
- ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS OF MAY 19-20 -- An
Aerosonde aircraft is seen from its launch
vehicle in this 2000 file photo taken in
Australia. Aerosonde Ltd., an Australian company,
is seeking permission to fly pilotless robotic
planes into the 2001 hurricane storms.
- The Aerosonde launches from a car's roof rack and
can carry a 4 1/2-pound payload of high-tech
measuring equipment. Maurice Gonella, Aerosonde's
principal engineer, says the 100,000 drones can
be put on autopilot and will constantly relay
information. - They also take photographs as they go. (AP
Photo/Aerosonde Robotic Aircraft)
7ROBOT LAWN MOWER
- Scott Jantz, an engineering student at the
University of Florida in Gainesville, Fla.,
watches a robot lawn mower Wednesday, Aug. 6,
1997, that cuts grass by itself while avoiding
obstacles such as trees, toys and even children
and pets. - Dubbed the LawnNibbler, the mower was designed
and built by Kevin Hakala for his engineering
master's thesis. - The battery-powered mower, developed at UF's
Machine Intelligence Laboratory, uses buried
radio wires, sonar and infrared emitters and
detectors to find its way without human
assistance. - (AP Photo/University of Florida)
8SANDIA ROBOTICS
Sandia National Laboratories researcher Tom Weber
holds a tiny robot named MARV, for Mobile
Autonomous Wheeled Vehicle, on Oct. 28, 1996 in
Albuquerque, N.M. Weber says MARV is a learning
tool to begin to understand the problems of
building inexpensive little robots for use in
military applications.(AP Photo/Jake Schoellkopf)
9Robots in the World
Installations
Stock
10Robots in the Real World
- Welding
- Painting
- Assembly
- Laboratory
- Manufacturers
A robot drills 550 holes in the vertical tail
fins of an F-16 fighter in 3 hours in General
Dynamics. It used to take 24 worker hours to do
the job manually.
By 1985, there were 180,000 robots on production
lines in the world with the US, France and Japan
accounting for 80 of them
11Industrial Manipulators
Puma 500
RRC Dexterous Manipulator
12Industrial Manipulators
Adept One XL
Adept Six 300
13Cartesian robot
14BATTLEBOTS CHAMPIONSHIP
- Robot "T-Minus", right, built by Reason Bradley
of Sausalito, Calif., flips opponent robot
"Halo", built by Brian Scearce of Fremont,
Calif., Thursday, May 24, 2001, during the
preliminary elimination rounds of the Battlebots
Robot Combat Championship on Treasure Island, in
San Francisco. - Battlebots is the sport of remote controlled
robotic combat, where a face-off of creations
made by Hollywood special effects artists, rocket
scientists, software designers, and garage
tinkerers meet in the boxing arena. - The championships will run through the Memorial
Day weekend, and end on Monday, May 28. (AP
Photo/Ben Margot)
15The Robot Revolution
- While a computer performs mental tasks, a
robotis a computer-controlledmachinedesigned
todo manualtasks
16Mobile Autonomous Robots
Khepera
CWRU Hexapod 1
17Robots in Research
- Mobile robots need brains
- Navigation is difficult
- And potentially dangerous
18Service robots Cleaning robot
19Service robots Building walls
20Service robots Gas station
21Pattern Recognition Making Sense of the World
- Pattern recognition involves identifying
recurring patterns in input data with the goal of
understanding or categorizing that input - Image Analysisidentifying objectsand shapes
22What are the robots good for?
- Manufacturing and materials handling
23What are the robots good for?
Bell Howell Mailmobile
24What are robots good for?
Lunokhod Moon Robot
25What are robots good for?
Dante II Frame Walking Robot
26What are robots good for?
- Telepresence and virtual reality
The Wheelbarrow, a bomb disposal robot
27What are robots good for?
- Telepresence and virtual reality
Advanced Tethered Vehicle (ATV)
28What are robots good for?
- Telepresence and virtual reality
Advanced Robot and Telemanipulator System for
Minimal Invasive Surgery (ARTEMIS)
29What are robots good for?
- Augmentation of human abilities
Sigourney Weaver in the movie Aliens
30Daihen Almega GO1S
31PCB ??? ???? Quad ???
32Kuka Robotics KL1500
33Automated Cells and Equipment ?? RoboCell
34 WTR-A1000
35Fanuc LR Mate ?? ???
36SONY??? ??? ??? ?, Aibo
37Yaskawa Help Mate
38(No Transcript)
39????? ???
NASA? RMS
40What are robots made of?
41What are robots made of?
- Effectors Tools for Action
- Locomotion
- Manipulation
- Sensors Tools for perception
- Proprioception
- Force Sensing
- Tactile Sensing
- Sonar
- Camera Data
42What are robots made of?
Carnegie Mellons Ambler
43What are robots made of?
MITs 3D Hopper
44What are robots made of?
MITs Spring Flamingo
45What are robots made of?
MITs Phantom
46What are robots made of?
MITs Planar Grasper
47What are robots made of?
ActivMedias Peoplebot
48What are robots made of?
The Johns Hopkins Beast
49What are robots made of?
MITs Fast Eye Gimbals
50Why Robotics?
- In view of the keen competition worldwide in
automotive manufacturing technology, the role of
robot is unavoidable with its current state of
the art. - With a pressing need for increased productivity
and the delivery of the end products of uniform
quality, industry is turning more and more toward
computer-based machine tools for the agile
assembly line
51Why Robotics?
- Modern computer architecture and sensors provide
intelligence to the robot. - Intelligence connection from perception to
action - The new message is robots are going to come out
of factory and enter our every day life. - In Japan, 70,000 robots are installed every
year. - Companies there are taking full advantage of the
productive power of robotics. - It is not an accident that Japan is such a strong
competition in so many manufacturing industries - Their companies are willing to make long-term
commitment to robotics and advanced automation
52The Basic Components of an Industrial Robotic
System
53The application areas of Industrial Robots are
54Robotics Emulation of Human Endeavors
55The Modern Technologies add the Qualities to the
Robots
56What can you expect from this lecture
- Applications of Artificial Intelligence
techniques in robotics and intelligent systems
My goal is to extend your imagination what can be
done using robotic and intelligent systems!!
57Main Components of Lectures
- We reimburse your all expenses
- Robot stays at PSU
- If you want, you can duplicate it next
58Assignments
- 1. In the Robotics Laboratory you can find many
videotapes about robots from top universities.
Watch them. This will help you in the project. - 2. Try to find on Internet or in local shops more
videos about robots and share them with the class.
- 3. In the lab and in the storage room try to find
components that may be useful for your projects.
If not, look to Tektronix Country Store, Wacky
Willy or similar shops for components.
59Sources
- Padhraic Smyth
- Kiriakos Kutulakos, University of Rochester
- Rojas FUB MI
- Behnke
- A. Ferworn
- Dodd, Harvey Mudd College
- Internet
- Brian Glassman, Mechanical Engineering at Florida
Institute of Technology - John Gallagher, SUNY Institute of Technology