529,846 research outputs found
An Autonomous Observation and Control System Based on EPICS and RTS2 for Antarctic Telescopes
For an unattended telescopes in Antarctic, the remote operation, autonomous
observation and control are essential. An EPICS (Experimental Physics and
Industrial Control System) and RTS2(Remote Telescope System, 2nd Version) based
autonomous observation and control system with remoted operation is introduced
in this paper. EPICS is a set of Open Source software tools, libraries and
applications developed collaboratively and used worldwide to create distributed
soft real-time control systems for scientific instruments while RTS2 is an open
source environment for control of a fully autonomous observatory. Using the
advantage of EPICS and RTS2 respectively, a combined integrated software
framework for autonomous observation and control is established that use RTS2
to fulfill the function of astronomical observation and use EPICS to fulfill
the device control of telescope. A command and status interface for EPICS and
RTS2 is designed to make the EPICS IOC (Input/Output Controller) components
integrate to RTS2 directly. For the specification and requirement of control
system of telescope in Antarctic, core components named Executor and Auto-focus
for autonomous observation is designed and implemented with remote operation
user interface based on Browser-Server mode. The whole system including the
telescope is tested in Lijiang Observatory in Yunnan Province for practical
observation to complete the autonomous observation and control, including
telescope control, camera control, dome control, weather information
acquisition with the local and remote operation.Comment: 20 pages,15 figure
Development of a semi-autonomous service robot with telerobotic capabilities
The importance to the United States of semi-autonomous systems for application to a large number of manufacturing and service processes is very clear. Two principal reasons emerge as the primary driving forces for development of such systems: enhanced national productivity and operation in environments whch are hazardous to humans. Completely autonomous systems may not currently be economically feasible. However, autonomous systems that operate in a limited operation domain or that are supervised by humans are within the technology capability of this decade and will likely provide reasonable return on investment. The two research and development efforts of autonomy and telerobotics are distinctly different, yet interconnected. The first addresses the communication of an intelligent electronic system with a robot while the second requires human communication and ergonomic consideration. Discussed here are work in robotic control, human/robot team implementation, expert system robot operation, and sensor development by the American Welding Institute, MTS Systems Corporation, and the Colorado School of Mines--Center for Welding Research
Energy Harvesting and Management for Wireless Autonomous Sensors
Wireless autonomous sensors that harvest ambient energy are attractive solutions, due to their convenience and economic benefits. A number of wireless autonomous sensor platforms which consume less than 100?W under duty-cycled operation are available. Energy harvesting technology (including photovoltaics, vibration harvesters, and thermoelectrics) can be used to power autonomous sensors. A developed system is presented that uses a photovoltaic module to efficiently charge a supercapacitor, which in turn provides energy to a microcontroller-based autonomous sensing platform. The embedded software on the node is structured around a framework in which equal precedent is given to each aspect of the sensor node through the inclusion of distinct software stacks for energy management and sensor processing. This promotes structured and modular design, allowing for efficient code reuse and encourages the standardisation of interchangeable protocols
Concept synthesis of an equipment manipulation and transportation system EMATS
The European Columbus Scenario is established. One of the Columbus Elements, the Man Tended Free Flyer will be designed for fully autonomous operation in order to provide the environment for micro gravity facilities. The Concept of an autonomous automation system which perform servicing of facilities and deals with related logistic tasks is discussed
Autonomous power system: Integrated scheduling
The Autonomous Power System (APS) project at NASA Lewis Research Center is designed to demonstrate the abilities of integrated intelligent diagnosis, control and scheduling techniques to space power distribution hardware. The project consists of three elements: the Autonomous Power Expert System (APEX) for fault diagnosis, isolation, and recovery (FDIR), the Autonomous Intelligent Power Scheduler (AIPS) to determine system configuration, and power hardware (Brassboard) to simulate a space-based power system. Faults can be introduced into the Brassboard and in turn, be diagnosed and corrected by APEX and AIPS. The Autonomous Intelligent Power Scheduler controls the execution of loads attached to the Brassboard. Each load must be executed in a manner that efficiently utilizes available power and satisfies all load, resource, and temporal constraints. In the case of a fault situation on the Brassboard, AIPS dynamically modifies the existing schedule in order to resume efficient operation conditions. A database is kept of the power demand, temporal modifiers, priority of each load, and the power level of each source. AIPS uses a set of heuristic rules to assign start times and resources to each load based on load and resource constraints. A simple improvement engine based upon these heuristics is also available to improve the schedule efficiency. This paper describes the operation of the Autonomous Intelligent Power Scheduler as a single entity, as well as its integration with APEX and the Brassboard. Future plans are discussed for the growth of the Autonomous Intelligent Power Scheduler
Safety and Security Analysis of AEB for L4 Autonomous Vehicle Using STPA
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are coming to our streets. Due to the presence of highly complex software systems in AVs, there is a need for a new hazard analysis technique to meet stringent safety standards. System Theoretic Process Analysis (STPA), based on Systems Theoretic Accident Modeling and Processes (STAMP), is a powerful tool that can identify, define, analyze and mitigate hazards from the earliest conceptual stage deployment to the operation of a system. Applying STPA to autonomous vehicles demonstrates STPA\u27s applicability to preliminary hazard analysis, alternative available, developmental tests, organizational design, and functional design of each unique safety operation.
This paper describes the STPA process used to generate system design requirements for an Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) system using a top-down analysis approach to system safety. The paper makes the following contributions to practicing STPA for safety and security:
1) It describes the incorporation of safety and security analysis in one process and discusses the benefits of this;
2) It provides an improved, structural approach for scenario analysis, concentrating on safety and security;
3) It demonstrates the utility of STPA for gap analysis of existing designs in the automotive domain;
4) It provides lessons learned throughout the process of applying STPA and STPA-Sec
Autonomous Integrated Receive System (AIRS) requirements definition. Volume 3: Performance and simulation
The autonomous and integrated aspects of the operation of the AIRS (Autonomous Integrated Receive System) are discussed from a system operation point of view. The advantages of AIRS compared to the existing SSA receive chain equipment are highlighted. The three modes of AIRS operation are addressed in detail. The configurations of the AIRS are defined as a function of the operating modes and the user signal characteristics. Each AIRS configuration selection is made up of three components: the hardware, the software algorithms and the parameters used by these algorithms. A comparison between AIRS and the wide dynamics demodulation (WDD) is provided. The organization of the AIRS analytical/simulation software is described. The modeling and analysis is for simulating the performance of the PN subsystem is documented. The frequence acquisition technique using a frequency-locked loop is also documented. Doppler compensation implementation is described. The technological aspects of employing CCD's for PN acquisition are addressed
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