Qinghai Quake and robots
Posted by admin on Apr 14, 2010 at 11:15 am America/Chicago
What is it with disasters? They're coming fast and furious. Here's the 411 on robots at the China quake. The Qinghai quake is the latest of the series of tragedies. Prof. Bin Li at the Shenyang Institute of Automation and an active member of the IEEE Technical Committee on Safety Security Rescue Robots, contacted the Chinese national earthquake response service this morning. It doesn't look like ground robots are appropriate-- the structures are mostly small and constructed from brick and mud. That type of construction is problematic-- the brick and mud turns to a liquidized dust, acting like water to fill all the voids and displaces air. Even if there are voids, the suspended dust causes respiratory distress. Eric Rasmussen InSTEDD has many tales to tell of the similar Turkey earthquake. China, by the way, does have at least one rescue robot. Bin tells me it was deployed to the mine collapse but could not be used because it wasn't waterproof. (A gentle aside to manufacturers: d'uh!) Aerial vehicles might be helpful for tactical operations and I can't help thinking that an unmanned marine vehicle with an acoustic camera capable of penetrating turbid waters could provide more information about that crack in the big dam... Bin was a participant in the NSF-JST-NIST workshop at Disaster City at the first of the month and we look forward to working with him and his group. In the meantime.. I'm speaking tomorrow at AUVSI day at the Capitol-- I hope that in the future we can do more than offer our prayers. Robin
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