A Survey On Autonomous Military Service Robot
Deepak Patil, Munsaf Ansari, Dilisha Tendulkar, Ritesh Bhatlekar, Vijaykumar Naik Pawar, Shailendra Aswale
- Year
- 2020
- Citations
- 43
Abstract
The advancement of technology in the field of autonomous navigation for robots is one of the leading trends nowadays, where we need to encounter huge amount of unpredictability that is natural in military environments during the defusing unexploded bombs or rescue operations. This paper reviews development of approaches from past until today which constitute to a large process in motion planning and controlling of robots. We focus on real-time human-detection and tracking in chaotic and dynamic conditions and also highlighting the significance of incorporating robotics, communications and information investigation in the field of land mine discovery. Army robots used in military environment can help in reducing cost, save lives and are as of now accessible in the types of self-sufficient automatons like drones, weapons and UAVs. The main thought is to plan and execute a prototype of a proficient ease computerized robot that is suitable for detecting covered mines and permit the user to control it remotely to keep away from human causes. Armed forced robots are apparently effectively already here in the form of autonomous drones, weapons and UAVs, with transport logistics vehicles hot on their heels. But if new age of robots all the more intimately with human partners in a group, they will require the learning capacity to manage circumstances that haven’t been pre-modified in a lab. Yet, while robots utilized in military positions can help lessen costs, empower efficiencies and saves lives when on our side, when in the hands of the enemy, or whenever given a lot of self-sufficiency, they could make fatal new dangers.
Keywords
Related papers
Statistical Learning Theory
Yuhai Wu, Vladimir Vapnik
1999
Artificial intelligence: a modern approach
1995
Fractional Differential Equations
Igor Podlubný
2025
Applied Nonlinear Control
Jean-Jacques Slotine, Weiping Li
1991