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Nuke Rescue. X Nuke By Matthew Madison and Matthew Ray. UTA Access to Engineering Camp 2011 June 10, 2011. Orientation. Our team with AVL vehicles. Outline of AVL. Objectives Introduction Statement of Problem Analysis Results Conclusions. Objectives.
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Nuke Rescue X Nuke By Matthew Madison and Matthew Ray UTA Access to Engineering Camp 2011 June 10, 2011
Orientation Our team with AVL vehicles
Outline of AVL • Objectives • Introduction • Statement of Problem • Analysis • Results • Conclusions
Objectives • Simulate an autonomous vehicle (AV) rescuing people from a radiation exposed area • Be able to conduct rescue without endangering more humans than those that have already been exposed
Introduction • The autonomous vehicle is driven remotely by a human, but may have some decisions made by onboard computers. • The autonomous vehicle is used for transporting, retrieval, and evacuation/rescuing.
Statement of Problem • Nuclear disasters may limit human capabilities of the inflicted people to escape. • Humans cannot go into this area because it is dangerous and sometimes lethal. • The goal is to be able to send in the autonomous vehicle in the disaster area to rescue people without endangering the rescuers. • The rescuers would control this vehicle from an alternate location.
Analysis • We used a terminal program, technical commands and an onboard camera to control the AV remotely. • Synchronize forward motors (Ktsf) and inform the AV how large a 1ft is using sensor feedback.
20000 30000 40000 Results
Conclusion • This is entirely possible and could be used in the real world in the future. • This would be relatively cheap compared to the cost for medical assistance of the rescuer preventing the injury of the rescuer during the mission. • It would be a faster rescue than it is currently and would help save lives.