TY - JOUR
T1 - Dante II
T2 - technical description, results, and lessons learned
AU - Bares, John E.
AU - Wettergreen, David S.
PY - 1999/7
Y1 - 1999/7
N2 - Dante II is a unique walking robot that provides important insight into high-mobility robotic locomotion and remote robotic exploration. Dante II's uniqueness stems from its combined legged and rappelling mobility system, its scanning-laser rangefinder, and its multilevel control scheme. In 1994 Dante II was deployed and successfully tested in a remote Alaskan volcano, as a demonstration of the fieldworthiness of these technologies. For more than five days the robot explored alone in the volcano crater using a combination of supervised autonomous control and teleoperated control. Human operators were located 120 km distant during the mission. This article first describes in detail the robot, support systems, control techniques, and user interfaces. We then describe results from the battery of field tests leading up to and including the volcanic mission. Finally, we put forth important lessons which comprise the legacy of this project. We show that framewalkers are appropriate for rappelling in severe terrain, though tether systems have limitations. We also discuss the importance of future 'autonomous' systems to realize when they require human support rather than relying on humans for constant oversight.
AB - Dante II is a unique walking robot that provides important insight into high-mobility robotic locomotion and remote robotic exploration. Dante II's uniqueness stems from its combined legged and rappelling mobility system, its scanning-laser rangefinder, and its multilevel control scheme. In 1994 Dante II was deployed and successfully tested in a remote Alaskan volcano, as a demonstration of the fieldworthiness of these technologies. For more than five days the robot explored alone in the volcano crater using a combination of supervised autonomous control and teleoperated control. Human operators were located 120 km distant during the mission. This article first describes in detail the robot, support systems, control techniques, and user interfaces. We then describe results from the battery of field tests leading up to and including the volcanic mission. Finally, we put forth important lessons which comprise the legacy of this project. We show that framewalkers are appropriate for rappelling in severe terrain, though tether systems have limitations. We also discuss the importance of future 'autonomous' systems to realize when they require human support rather than relying on humans for constant oversight.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0032627608&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/02783649922066475
DO - 10.1177/02783649922066475
M3 - Article
SN - 0278-3649
VL - 18
SP - 621
EP - 649
JO - International Journal of Robotics Research
JF - International Journal of Robotics Research
IS - 7
ER -