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Crawler Reconnaissance

For Immediate Release: Jul 08, 2003

It can follow a search instruction plan, classify, and map underwater mines in turbulent ocean surf zones. It travels about 6 feet per second on land, and about 2 feet per second in the water. It avoids obstacles. These 90-lb, fully autonomous amphibious reconnaissance vehicles may look like no more than overgrown remotely operated toy tanks, but they have been used to search under the World Trade Center after 9/11, to search Afghan caves, to look at underwater wreckage off Normandy's beaches, and several are now currently deployed in Iraq.

Funded by Tom Swean at the Office of Naval Research, the Surf Zone Crawlers are being built for the Navy by Foster-Miller, Inc. in Waltham, MA in partnership with the Naval Coastal Systems Station as one possible answer to the perennial problem of bottom mine detection in very shallow waters and the surf zone. It is based on a platform by Foster-Miller called the Tactical Adaptable Robot, which operates on land. The underwater concept – now called the Surf Zone Crawler – is to release one or many crawlers to search predetermined regions of the sea bottom, and to determine whether an area is mined or not and what type of threat exists. Then, Reacquisition-Identification-Neutralization (RIN) missions can be performed using these bottom-crawling robots.

"The key components of underwater robotic reconnaissance," says Swean, "are search and area coverage, sensing and discrimination of bottom objects, communications, and the autonomous control of single as well as multiple platforms. The goal is to use these robots to exhaustively scout and map potential approach lanes for amphibious naval operations. Control, navigation, communication, and sensor payload are the key issues."

"Each of these robots carries a suite of sensors to detect mines and obstacles and reject clutter," says Mitch Gavrilash at the Naval Sea Systems Command. "When it detects what it determines is a threat object, it reports to a remote human operator and provides an image for identification." The maps and images are then stored electronically for future avoidance or neutralization missions.

The Surf Zone Crawler can be configured with various battery, sensor and payload options, such as sonars, cameras, metal detectors, tactile sensors (they know what they bump into once they bump into it), and in the near future, chemical-biological sensors. It operates for 4 -6 hours on lithium batteries, and can travel about 7 nautical miles in water during that time.

The longer range goal of this research is to develop teams of robots to work cooperatively together to hunt and neutralize mines. "Communication bandwidth is a real issue," says Swean, "as is the interoperability of several crawlers working together. It's one thing to communicate above water – that's fairly simple – but it's quite another to do it underwater. Acoustic modems are being developed, but they can only send a limited amount of information. This is our current challenge."

About the Office of Naval Research

The Department of the Navy’s Office of Naval Research provides the science and technology necessary to maintain the Navy and Marine Corps’ technological advantage. Through its affiliates, ONR is a leader in science and technology with engagement in 50 states, 55 countries, 634 institutions of higher learning and nonprofit institutions, and more than 960 industry partners. ONR, through its commands, including headquarters, ONR Global and the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., employs more than 3,800 people, comprising uniformed, civilian and contract personnel.