The UF Micro-Air-Vehicle (MAV) Virtual Environment systems provide
a synthetic environment in which hardware MAVs can be virtually
flight tested. The project, headed by Dr. Andrew Kurdila and Dr. Rick Lind of the
UF Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department, is funded by
the United States Air Force.
The facilities operate by measuring physical response of MAVs in
a wind tunnel, estimating the MAVs inertial location in a
virtual urban environment, flying the MAV in this environment, and
viewing the virtual urban terrain in real-time. The two compatible research facilities
enable the study of
- vision-processing algorithms for real-time identification of
critical features required
for coordinated guidance, navigation and control in complex 3D
surroundings including
urban environments
- sensor fusion techniques that synthesize vision data and onboard
micro-scale sensors
that may include micro GPS processors, gyros, accelerometers,
inclinometers, and speed
sensors
- agile, autonomous closed-loop control methodologies that utilize
rapid path planning
updates based on vision-derived information and mission requirements.
- Agile, autonomous closed-loop control methodologies that explore
the tradeoff
between vehicle control bandwidth, vision processing algorithm
bandwidth, and the
resulting stability of the coupled, closed loop system.
The Digital Worlds Institute's former Associate Director, Andy Quay, designed
and built the virtual environment hardware systems. The display
system located on the UF campus consists of three rear-projected video screens and a PC cluster
for image generation. The center screen supports passive stereoscopic
(polarized eyewear) for use with additional scientific visualization
applications. The projection screen from Stewart
Filmscreen Corporation, the Projection
Design F1 SXGA video projectors, and the CYVIZ
projector stacking mounts were installed by VizEveryWhere. The display system located at the REEF site consists of six 52" plasma screens. A dedicated server houses the 3D urban databases which is networked with a ten channel PC cluster for image generation. Dell sourced the computing resources for both facilities.
The
virtual environment software is built upon MultiGen-Paradigm's distributed VEGA, which allows the loading of the urban databases and
synchronizes the video screens driven by the PC image clusters. Digital Worlds built one of the urban databases which spans several square miles.
There are now a total of four compatible visualization
systems at UF, three on campus and one at the REEF. Two of the systems are housed
in Digital Worlds' own research labs, the REVE and the NAVE. All of the systems allow other types of scientific
and engineering visualization as well.
Design and implementation of Hardware in the Loop simulation of
Autonomous Micro-Aerial Vehicles (MAV)
Design and implementation of virtual environment system to allow
testing of MAV design in nondestructive Virtual Space
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