Skid Steering of Robotic Vehicle for Autonomous Applications

Author(s):  
Robert Dveges ◽  
Frantisek Durovsky ◽  
Viliam Fedak
2010 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juyong Kang ◽  
Wongun Kim ◽  
Kyongsu Yi ◽  
Soungyong Jung ◽  
Jongseok Lee

2009 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 645-652 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juyong Kang ◽  
Wongun Kim ◽  
Kyongsu Yi ◽  
Soungyong Jung

Author(s):  
Varun Kumar ◽  
Lakshya Gaur ◽  
Arvind Rehalia

In this paper the authors have explained the development of robotic vehicle prepared by them, which operates autonomously and is not controlled by the users, except for selection of modes. The different modes of the automated vehicle are line following, object following and object avoidance with alternate trajectory determination. The complete robotic assembly is mounted on a chassis comprising of Arduino Uno, Servo motors, HC-SRO4 (Ultrasonic sensor), DC motors (Geared), L293D Motor Driver, IR proximity sensors, Voltage Regulator along with castor wheel and two normal wheels.


Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. WA21-WA34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven A. Arcone ◽  
James H. Lever ◽  
Laura E. Ray ◽  
Benjamin S. Walker ◽  
Gordon Hamilton ◽  
...  

The crevassed firn of the McMurdo shear zone (SZ) within the Ross Ice Shelf may also contain crevasses deep within its meteoric and marine ice, but the surface crevassing prevents ordinary vehicle access to investigate its structure geophysically. We used a lightweight robotic vehicle to tow 200- and 400-MHz ground-penetrating radar antennas simultaneously along 100 parallel transects over a [Formula: see text] grid spanning the SZ width. Transects were generally orthogonal to the ice flow. Total firn and meteoric ice thickness was approximately 160 m. Firn crevasses profiled at 400 MHz were up to 16 m wide, under snow bridges up to 10 m thick, and with strikes near 35°–40° to the transect direction. From the top down, 200-MHz profiles revealed firn diffractions originating to a depth of approximately 40 m, no discernible structure within the meteoric ice, a discontinuous transitional horizon, and at least 20 m of stratified marine ice; 28–31 m of freeboard found more marine ice exists. Based on 10 consecutive transects covering approximately [Formula: see text], we preliminarily interpreted the transitional horizon to be a thin saline layer, and marine ice hyperbolic diffractions and reflections to be responses to localized fractures, and crevasses filled with unstratified marine ice, all at strikes from 27° to 50°. We preliminarily interpreted off-nadir, marine ice horizons to be responses to linear and folded faults, similar to some in firn. The coinciding and synchronously folded areas of fractured firn and marine ice suggested that the visibly unstructured meteoric ice beneath our grid was also fractured, but either never crevassed, crevassed and sutured without marine ice inclusions, or that any ice containing crevasses might have eroded before marine ice accretion. We will test these interpretations with analysis of all transects and by extending our grid and increasing our depth ranges.


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