The
National
Robotics Engineering Center (NREC) at
Carnegie
Mellon has been awarded a $14.4m contract to build a fully autonomous
battlefield robot for the
US Army.
The money will be spent on updating an existing
6.5-ton
unmanned ground vehicle, nicknamed Crusher, that uses a six-wheel drive and
advanced processing to navigate difficult terrain.
The contract comes just a month after the
Carnegie
Mellon Tartan Racing team
won first
place in the
Darpa
Urban Challenge.
"We are delighted that NREC will play a key role in showing how advanced
autonomous vehicles work in future combat systems settings," said NREC director
John Bares.
"Our goal will be to develop, integrate and test a high-performance unmanned
ground vehicle with the most up-to-date mobility and autonomy technologies."
The NREC team will also further improve the vehicle's software to include
manoeuvring capabilities in combat and integrate the vehicle into existing
military organisations.
Armies around the world are increasingly looking to
robotic
troops to
cut deaths in
combat.
The US Army already uses automatic aerial drones,
anti-sniper
robots and
wireless gun
platforms in combat and wants a quarter of its transport division automated
by 2030.
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