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Honey bees have taught researchers how to guide planes through complex manoeuvres
Honey bees have taught researchers how to guide planes through complex manoeuvres
1 December 2010

Australian scientists have developed a novel autopilot that guides aircraft through complex aerobatic manoeuvres by watching the horizon like a honey bee.

Allowing aircraft to quickly sense which way is 鈥渦p鈥 by imitating how honeybees see, engineers and researchers at The Vision Centre, Queensland Brain Institute and the School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering at The University of Queensland have made it possible for planes to guide themselves through extreme manoeuvres, including the loop, the barrel roll and the Immelmann turn, with speed, deftness and precision.

鈥淐urrent aircraft use gyroscopes to work out their orientation, but they are not always reliable, as the errors accumulate over long distances,鈥 said Vision Centre researcher Saul Thurrowgood.

鈥淥ur system, which takes 1000ths of a second to directly measure the position of the horizon, is much faster at calculating position, and more accurate.鈥

鈥淲ith exact information about the aircraft鈥檚 surroundings delivered in negligible time, the plane can focus on other tasks.鈥

The group first 鈥渢rained鈥 the system to recognise the sky and the ground by feeding hundreds of different landscape images to it and teaching to it compare the blue colour of the sky with red-green colours of the ground.

Simple, low resolution cameras that are similar to a bee鈥檚 visual system are then attached to the aircraft, allowing the plane to take its own landscape pictures to identify the horizon while flying.

鈥淚magine a plane that has eyes attached to each side at the front 鈥 the wide-angle camera lenses provide a view of 360 degrees.鈥

Mr Thurrowgood says that the challenge was to figure out the optimal resolution of images that will allow the system to both locate the horizon quickly and not compromise the accuracy of its information.

鈥淭he measurement process can certainly be quickened 鈥 we only have to adjust the cameras to take images with a smaller resolution,鈥 he says. 鈥淗owever, it won鈥檛 produce the same quality of data, so the key is to find an optimal resolution where you have both speed and quality.鈥

Testing the aircraft in an air field, the unmanned plane was directed to perform three aerobatic movements, the barrel roll, Immelmann turn and a full loop.

鈥淲e had two pieces of evidence that it worked out 鈥 first, the plane didn鈥檛 crash and second, the system鈥檚 identification of the horizon matched with what we measured ourselves.鈥

Mr Thurrowgood says that the system can potentially be adapted for all types of aircraft 鈥 including military, sporting and commercial planes.

鈥淲e have created an autopilot that overcomes the errors generated from gyroscopes by imitating a biological system 鈥 the honeybees,鈥 says Professor Mandyam Srinivasan.

鈥淎lthough we don鈥檛 fully understand how these insects work, we know that they are good at stabilising themselves while making complicated flight manoeuvres by watching the horizon.鈥

鈥淭his project required tremendous effort, as separating the sky from the ground visually is not always as easy as we imagine 鈥 it can be difficult to pick out the horizon, so my hat鈥檚 off to Mr Thurrowgood for achieving this.鈥

The group will be presenting their paper UAV attitude control using the visual horizon today at the Eleventh Australasian Conference on Robotics and Automation. Videos of the test flights are also available from the group.

The Vision Centre is funded by the Australian Research Council as the ARC Centre of Excellence in Vision Science.

The Queensland Brain Institute (QBI) is a research institute of The University of Queensland. It operates out of $63 million state-of-the-art facility and houses 26 principal investigators with strong international reputations. The QBI is one of the largest neuroscience institutes in the world dedicated to understanding the mechanisms underlying brain function.

Details at More information:
Saul Thurrowgood, The Vision Centre and The University of Queensland, ph+61 (0)7 3346 7862 or 0432 507 950
Professor M Srinivasan, The Vision Centre and The University of Queensland, +61 (0) 7 3346 6322 or 0434 603 082
Professor Trevor Lamb, The Vision Centre, ph +61 (0)2 61258929 or 0434022375
Mandy Thoo, The Vision Centre media contact, 0402 544 391