A Basic Research project
BRITE-EURAM III - Industrial
and Material Technology programme
SUMMARY
This proposal concerns the study and development of methodologies for optimising acoustical and optical sensors' functioning and integrating related data for the formation of an accurate virtual environment aimed at supporting navigation, inspection, and maintenance/repair tasks of a multifunctional remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV).
At present, the guidance
and the inspection tasks performed by ROVs are not easy for several reasons.
For instance, every kind
of data acquired by a sensor device on-board a vehicle is controlled by
an operator.
The ROV navigation is made
difficult by the lack of depth perception of the operator who utilises,
typically, only optical cameras. In other words, the several sensors work
separately and for different goals. As a consequence, to perform an effective
operation, an ROV requires specialised crew, expensive training course
and many hours of practice.
The integrated use of acoustical
and optical cameras to reconstruct the actual scenario by a virtual environment
improves the pilot comfort and then speeds up the operations, also reducing
the number of operators and then the overall cost.
Moreover, this sharply increases
the capabilities of telerobotic tasks in that an operator can interact
with the synthetic scenario, understanding the sur-rounding situation,
navigating and simulating a specific task before actually per-forming it.
Also, deskilling the operator by the use of better computer model based
controller will reduce the cost of ROV operations.
In this context, this proposal aims at achieving mainly two specific targets:
These objectives can
be attained by:
Link to the online demo (Cosmo Player plug-in required!)
Official VENICE web page