Sciweavers

IROS
2007
IEEE

Hiding the acoustic signature of a mobile robot

14 years 5 months ago
Hiding the acoustic signature of a mobile robot
—A mobile robot can be a rather significant source of noise: noisy fans cool onboard computers, motors are spinning, rubber wheels are squeaking against the floor, and mechanical parts are grinding against each other. Despite these noise problems, robots are often suggested as ideal security and surveillance tools, since they can reliably patrol an area, and remove people from harms way. While the arguments for using a robot are persuasive, the use of a noisy robot for these tasks is questionable. Certainly, they might allow a human to be separated from immediate harm, but given the ease with which people and/or machines can detect changes in the ambient noise, a noisy robot might not be very effective at performing its duties. One solution is to make very small, very quiet robots. But such small robots do not usually do very much either, as their sensing and computational power is minimal. An alternative solution is to use a larger robot, but make the robot aware of its own acoustic...
Eric Martinson
Added 03 Jun 2010
Updated 03 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where IROS
Authors Eric Martinson
Comments (0)