870 research outputs found

    UAVs for the Environmental Sciences

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    This book gives an overview of the usage of UAVs in environmental sciences covering technical basics, data acquisition with different sensors, data processing schemes and illustrating various examples of application

    DeepSurveyCam — A Deep Ocean Optical Mapping System

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    Underwater photogrammetry and in particular systematic visual surveys of the deep sea are by far less developed than similar techniques on land or in space. The main challenges are the rough conditions with extremely high pressure, the accessibility of target areas (container and ship deployment of robust sensors, then diving for hours to the ocean floor), and the limitations of localization technologies (no GPS). The absence of natural light complicates energy budget considerations for deep diving flash-equipped drones. Refraction effects influence geometric image formation considerations with respect to field of view and focus, while attenuation and scattering degrade the radiometric image quality and limit the effective visibility. As an improvement on the stated issues, we present an AUV-based optical system intended for autonomous visual mapping of large areas of the seafloor (square kilometers) in up to 6000 m water depth. We compare it to existing systems and discuss tradeoffs such as resolution vs. mapped area and show results from a recent deployment with 90,000 mapped square meters of deep ocean floor

    Adaptive Airborne Separation to Enable UAM Autonomy in Mixed Airspace

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    The excitement and promise generated by Urban Air Mobility (UAM) concepts have inspired both new entrants and large aerospace companies throughout the world to invest hundreds of millions in research and development of air vehicles, both piloted and unpiloted, to fulfill these dreams. The management and separation of all these new aircraft have received much less attention, however, and even though NASAs lead is advancing some promising concepts for Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Traffic Management (UTM), most operations today are limited to line of sight with the vehicle, airspace reservation and geofencing of individual flights. Various schemes have been proposed to control this new traffic, some modeled after conventional air traffic control and some proposing fully automatic management, either from a ground-based entity or carried out on board among the vehicles themselves. Previous work has examined vehicle-based traffic management in the very low altitude airspace within a metroplex called UTM airspace in which piloted traffic is rare. A management scheme was proposed in that work that takes advantage of the homogeneous nature of the traffic operating in UTM airspace. This paper expands that concept to include a traffic management plan usable at all altitudes desired for electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing urban and short-distance, inter-city transportation. The interactions with piloted aircraft operating under both visual and instrument flight rules are analyzed, and the role of Air Traffic Control services in the postulated mixed traffic environment is covered. Separation values that adapt to each type of traffic encounter are proposed, and the relationship between required airborne surveillance range and closure speed is given. Finally, realistic scenarios are presented illustrating how this concept can reliably handle the density and traffic mix that fully implemented and successful UAM operations would entail

    Effective image enhancement and fast object detection for improved UAV applications

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    As an emerging field, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) feature from interdisciplinary techniques in science, engineering and industrial sectors. The massive applications span from remote sensing, precision agriculture, marine inspection, coast guarding, environmental monitoring, natural resources monitoring, e.g. forest, land and river, and disaster assessment, to smart city, intelligent transportation and logistics and delivery. With the fast growing demands from a wide range of application sectors, there is always a bottleneck how to improve the efficiency and efficacy of UAV in operation. Often, smart decision making is needed from the captured footages in a real-time manner, yet this is severely affected by the poor image quality, ineffective object detection and recognition models, and lack of robust and light models for supporting the edge computing and real deployment. In this thesis, several innovative works have been focused and developed to tackle some of the above issues. First of all, considering the quality requirements of the UAV images, various approaches and models have been proposed, yet they focus on different aspects and produce inconsistent results. As such, the work in this thesis has been categorised into denoising and dehazing focused, followed by comprehensive evaluation in terms of both qualitative and quantitative assessment. These will provide valuable insights and useful guidance to help the end user and research community. For fast and effective object detection and recognition, deep learning based models, especially the YOLO series, are popularly used. However, taking the YOLOv7 as the baseline, the performance is very much affected by a few factors, such as the low quality of the UAV images and the high-level of demanding of resources, leading to unsatisfactory performance in accuracy and processing speed. As a result, three major improvements, namely transformer, CIoULoss and the GhostBottleneck module, are introduced in this work to improve feature extraction, decision making in detection and recognition, and running efficiency. Comprehensive experiments on both publicly available and self-collected datasets have validated the efficiency and efficacy of the proposed algorithm. In addition, to facilitate the real deployment such as edge computing scenarios, embedded implementation of the key algorithm modules is introduced. These include the creative implementation on the Xavier NX platform, in comparison to the standard workstation settings with the NVIDIA GPUs. As a result, it has demonstrated promising results with improved performance in reduced resources consumption of the CPU/GPU usage and enhanced frame rate of real-time processing to benefit the real-time deployment with the uncompromised edge computing. Through these innovative investigation and development, a better understanding has been established on key challenges associated with UAV and Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM) based applications, and possible solutions are presented. Keywords: Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV); Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM); denoising; dehazing; object detection; object recognition; deep learning; YOLOv7; transformer; GhostBottleneck; scene matching; embedded implementation; Xavier NX; edge computing.As an emerging field, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) feature from interdisciplinary techniques in science, engineering and industrial sectors. The massive applications span from remote sensing, precision agriculture, marine inspection, coast guarding, environmental monitoring, natural resources monitoring, e.g. forest, land and river, and disaster assessment, to smart city, intelligent transportation and logistics and delivery. With the fast growing demands from a wide range of application sectors, there is always a bottleneck how to improve the efficiency and efficacy of UAV in operation. Often, smart decision making is needed from the captured footages in a real-time manner, yet this is severely affected by the poor image quality, ineffective object detection and recognition models, and lack of robust and light models for supporting the edge computing and real deployment. In this thesis, several innovative works have been focused and developed to tackle some of the above issues. First of all, considering the quality requirements of the UAV images, various approaches and models have been proposed, yet they focus on different aspects and produce inconsistent results. As such, the work in this thesis has been categorised into denoising and dehazing focused, followed by comprehensive evaluation in terms of both qualitative and quantitative assessment. These will provide valuable insights and useful guidance to help the end user and research community. For fast and effective object detection and recognition, deep learning based models, especially the YOLO series, are popularly used. However, taking the YOLOv7 as the baseline, the performance is very much affected by a few factors, such as the low quality of the UAV images and the high-level of demanding of resources, leading to unsatisfactory performance in accuracy and processing speed. As a result, three major improvements, namely transformer, CIoULoss and the GhostBottleneck module, are introduced in this work to improve feature extraction, decision making in detection and recognition, and running efficiency. Comprehensive experiments on both publicly available and self-collected datasets have validated the efficiency and efficacy of the proposed algorithm. In addition, to facilitate the real deployment such as edge computing scenarios, embedded implementation of the key algorithm modules is introduced. These include the creative implementation on the Xavier NX platform, in comparison to the standard workstation settings with the NVIDIA GPUs. As a result, it has demonstrated promising results with improved performance in reduced resources consumption of the CPU/GPU usage and enhanced frame rate of real-time processing to benefit the real-time deployment with the uncompromised edge computing. Through these innovative investigation and development, a better understanding has been established on key challenges associated with UAV and Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM) based applications, and possible solutions are presented. Keywords: Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV); Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM); denoising; dehazing; object detection; object recognition; deep learning; YOLOv7; transformer; GhostBottleneck; scene matching; embedded implementation; Xavier NX; edge computing

    The Land Tool Box is Full

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