Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle

This thesis report is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2010.

Dades bibliogràfiques
Autor principal: Mahmood, Marif
Altres autors: Azad, AKM Abul Kalam
Format: Thesis
Idioma:English
Publicat: BRAC University 2011
Matèries:
Accés en línia:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/884
id 10361-884
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-8842019-09-30T04:18:33Z Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle Mahmood, Marif Azad, AKM Abul Kalam Sadi, Mehdi Hasan Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, BRAC University Electrical and electronic engineering This thesis report is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2010. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis report. Includes bibliographical references (page 30). Unmanned ground vehicles (UGV) are robotic platforms that are used as an extension of human capability. This type of robot is generally capable of operating outdoors and over a wide variety of terrain, functioning in place of humans. UGVs have counterparts in aerial warfare (unmanned aerial vehicle) and naval warfare (remotely operated underwater vehicles). Unmanned robotics is actively being developed for both civilian and military use to perform dull, dirty, and dangerous activities. There are two general classes of unmanned ground vehicles: Teleoperated and Autonomous. A teleoperated UGV is a vehicle that is controlled by a human operator at a remote location via a communications link. All cognitive processes are provided by the operator based upon sensory feedback from either line-of-sight visual observation or remote sensory input such as video cameras. A basic example of the principles of teleoperation would be a toy remote control car. An autonomous UGV is essentially an autonomous robot but is specifically a vehicle that operates on the surface of the ground. Applications of UGV range from remote surveillance to scattered mine detection. The purpose of the thesis is to design a teleoperated unmanned vehicle mounted with a camera. The vehicle will be initially controlled via wire. Images sent by the camera will be used for navigating the vehicle to the desired location. User sitting in front of an end device such as a computer would be receiving and viewing images sent by the camera and based on that would steer the vehicle. In further development the vehicle will be controlled by Radio Frequency from a distant location. Marif Mahmood B. Electrical and Electronic Engineering 2011-04-20T05:11:55Z 2011-04-20T05:11:55Z 2010 2010-04 Thesis ID 09221210 http://hdl.handle.net/10361/884 en BRAC University thesis are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. 61 pages application/pdf BRAC University
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle Electrical and electronic engineering
Mahmood, Marif
Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
description This thesis report is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2010.
author2 Azad, AKM Abul Kalam
author_facet Azad, AKM Abul Kalam
Mahmood, Marif
format Thesis
author Mahmood, Marif
author_sort Mahmood, Marif
title Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
title_short Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
title_full Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
title_fullStr Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
title_sort implementation of unnamed ground vehicle
publisher BRAC University
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/884
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