管家婆免费开奖大全

管家婆免费开奖大全 student team to compete at international self-driving car competition

Photo of aUToronto team members
From left, aUToronto team members Zachary Kroeze, Andreas Schimpe, Keenan Burnett and Mona Gridseth in front of their autonomous vehicle Zeus (photo by Laura Pedersen)

The hardest part was getting started.

The 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering鈥檚 aUToronto team, a group of undergraduate and graduate students selected to compete in the international Autodrive Challenge, is heading to its first competition in Yuma, Ariz. beginning on April 30. There they will be judged on their work converting a Chevrolet Bolt EV 鈥 which they鈥檝e dubbed Zeus 鈥 into a self-driving car.

鈥淛ust getting the vehicle interface up and running was one of the most difficult challenges so far,鈥 says Zachary Kroeze, aUToronto鈥檚 management lead and a postdoctoral researcher with Angela Schoellig, an assistant professor at 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 Institute for Aerospace Studies (UTIAS) and the team鈥檚 principal faculty adviser.

鈥淲e spent the first five months with Zeus trying to design the car to accept our inputs and start moving autonomously.鈥

Created by GM and SAE International, the Autodrive Challenge chose eight teams from universities across North America for the three-year competition. Now, at the end of Year 1, the teams will be required to complete three autonomous driving tasks: detecting and stopping at a stop sign, lane-keeping while navigating tight turns, and avoiding obstacles by performing proper lane-change manoeuvres.

When the aUToronto delegation hits the ground in Yuma, their first task will be to recalibrate Zeus鈥檚 sensors, including several cameras and a 3D LIDAR, before undergoing a technical inspection by the judges. Although driving conditions in the Arizona desert will be nothing like their test track in north Toronto, the team leads feel ready for anything.

鈥淲e鈥檝e designed our systems to be as agnostic as possible to environmental conditions. Our system is designed to be robust in different road conditions, dust, and direct sunlight,鈥 says technical team lead Keenan Burnett, a master鈥檚 of science candidate at UTIAS. 鈥淲e鈥檝e also done our best to future-proof our systems 鈥 for example, our lane detection modules are designed to handle a wide variety of scenarios that you鈥檇 never see on a normal highway.鈥

Future-proofing has been integral to their initial designs, with aUToronto鈥檚 senior autonomy architect Mona Gridseth, a PhD candiate at UTIAS, estimating that 80 to 90 per cent of the software they鈥檝e developed will be reusable for the tasks they鈥檒l have to complete at the Year 2 and Year 3 competitions.

鈥淲e鈥檝e written our algorithms to be simple and elegant enough to run quickly on our server,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 really excited to get out there and show the judges what we鈥檝e built. I think we all are.鈥

鈥淔rom the beginning we鈥檝e been looking at the challenge from a robotics perspective, rather than an automotive perspective,鈥 says Burnett. 鈥淥ur team took the approach of designing a robot to complete driving tasks really well. That鈥檚 unique.鈥

 

Engineering