A platform for aerial robotics research and demonstration.
Microsoft AirSim (Aerial Informatics and Robotics Simulation) is an open-source robotics simulation platform. From ground vehicles, wheeled robotics, aerial drones, and even static IoT devices, AirSim can capture data for models without costly field operations.
Welcome to Information Engineering. Established by Professor Sir Michael Brady in 1985, the Robotics Research Group brought together a group of like-minded engineers working in robotics research and artificial intelligence. Now known as Information Engineering, it is currently composed of seven research groups whose interests range from machine learning to mobile robotics.
Research The Flying Machine Arena offers a safe, controlled sandbox environment allowing the testing and validation of mobile robots. Thanks to its large size, it allows the testing of fast-paced motions, be it on the ground or in the air.
Robotics and Autonomous Systems will carry articles describing fundamental developments in the field of robotics, with special emphasis on autonomous systems. An important goal of this journal is to extend the state of the art in both symbolic and sensory based robot control and learning in the context of autonomous systems.
Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium on Aerial Robotics Most current drones are designed with a static morphology aimed at exploiting a single locomotion mode. This results in limited versatility and adaptability to multi-domain environments, such as those encountered in rescue missions, agriculture and inspection, where multiple locomotion capabilities could be more effective.
The objective of this research was to develop an adaptive water sampling device for an aerial robot and demonstrate the accuracy of its functions in laboratory and field conditions. The prototype device consisted of a sensor node with dissolved oxygen, pH, electrical conductivity, temperature, turbidity, and depth sensors, a microcontroller, and a sampler with three cartridges.
I’m talking about Bat Bot, the awesome result of aerial robotics research by Caltech and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). This creation was inspired by the real flying.