July 15, 2009   

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs for short) have proved their usefulness as military tools. But most UAVs aren’t truly autonomous: they’re operated remotely by a human controller from the ground.

To become truly autonomous, UAVs will need to get far better at sensing obstacles and reacting in time to avoid a collision. This will be especially important if they are ever to operate in commercial space.

Sanjiv Singh, a professor and researcher at Carnegie Mellon University, has developed a new system to help UAVs do just this.

Since most UAVs are fairly small and lightweight, they can’t carry the heavy, power-hungry sensors that larger aircraft can use to detect other planes. So Singh and student Debadeepta Dey developed an algorithm that uses an ordinary camera and several software programs to detect potential obstacles.

Their sense-and-avoid system functions across a wide field of view (from up to three miles away) and in a wide range of weather conditions. It does this by finding contrasting points in a video image (such as a dark spot against white clouds) and tracking them to determine movement.

In the video below, the system outlines moving objects in red, such as a plane (distinguished by the green box). It also identifies the characteristic movement of dust–rather than a flying obstacle–on the lens (blue).

“We have proved that sense and avoid for unmanned aerial vehicles using passive sensors is a very real possibility, and with some more time and maturity, this will evolve into a deployable standard technology,” says Dey, who presented details of the system at the International Conference on Field and Service Robotics yesterday.

The sense-and-avoid system can pick out a small, two-seater plane from five miles away, says Dey. So far, he and Singh have tested it from the ground using real aircraft. Currently, it produces some false positives (identifying bugs as planes, for example), but the researchers plan to couple a lidar sensor to the camera to improve it. By bouncing a laser beam off of the obstacle, the lidar will measure its distance to help determine whether it’s really a plane on a collision course or just an insect hitching a ride.

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