A new robot is heading to Iraq this spring which can accurately pinpoint the
location of a gun being fired within seconds.
Robot Enhanced Detection Outpost with Lasers (RedOwl) uses sound sensors
originally developed for hearing aids, advanced video sensors and neural network
programming to back-trace shots to their source.
The device can then direct fire from troops to neutralise the threat.
RedOwl was developed by the
Boston
University Photonics Center and
iRobot
Corporation, and will be deployed by the US Army after further field tests
involving the tracking of mortar rounds.
"The RedOwl equipped
PackBot
has been field tested for the Army's Rapid Equipping Force at a rifle and
trapshooting range," said a spokesman from the Photonics Center.
"Of the more than 150 rounds fired from 9mm pistols, M-16 and AK-47 rifles
from over 100 metres, the RedOwl system equipped with an acoustic direction
finding unit from
BioMimetic
Systems located the source of the gunfire successfully 94 per cent of the
time."
It is hoped that RedOwl will reduce friendly fire casualties among troops and
Iraqi civilians, some 500,000 of whom have perished since Saddam Hussein was
ousted, according to some counts.
The US Army has stepped up development funding for robotics and has deployed
several systems, including
Talon robot gun
platforms and the
Crusher
automatic jeep.
It also sponsors the
Darpa
automated vehicle races with the aim of making a third of all Army transport
automated by the middle of the century.
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