It鈥檚 a bird, it鈥檚 a plane, it鈥檚 a Lighter-Than-Air (LTA) robotic shark blimp, which is what a team of 亚洲AV students and faculty used to participate in the 99++ Luftballoons Competition at Indiana University on November 9 through 13.聽聽聽聽聽
The competition took place at the Indiana University Bloomington campus where people from Mason, the University of California Los Angeles, Indiana University at Bloomington, Pennsylvania State University, the Office of Naval Research, the Naval Surface Warfare Center 鈥 Crane Division, and the Army Research Laboratory competed in an aerial soccer match using remote-controlled LTA robots.聽聽
鈥淟TA robots don鈥檛 need any support to hold them in the air. Helicopters need propellers, but all LTA robots can stay in the air on their own. Instead, they need controls to move them about in the air,鈥 says Mason graduate student and competition teammate Joseph Prince Mathew.聽聽聽聽聽
Each team had defenders and seekers to protect their goal and score points against the other team. 鈥淚t got pretty competitive,鈥 says Dinesh Karri, another team member. 鈥淏ut it was so much fun.鈥澛犅犅
Every team played each other, and the teams with the most points faced off at the end of the five-day event. 鈥淯nfortunately, we lost, but we had the most points overall throughout the week,鈥 says Mathew.聽聽聽聽聽
Mathew and Karri were working with Assistant Professor聽Feitian聽Zhang to develop an underwater glider as part of their PhD studies when they found out about the opportunity to bring their skills to the air. 鈥淚t was a change of medium, from underwater to air. The dynamics are pretty similar,鈥 says Mathew.聽聽聽聽聽
Robert Hooks, a junior undergraduate electrical engineering major, jumped on the project because of his interest in robotics and autonomous systems. 鈥淲hen I heard about it from one of my professors, I was very intrigued. It was a valuable and fun experience to learn hands-on,鈥 says Hooks.