(Press-News.org) A University of Texas at Arlington researcher is constructing an open-networked airborne computing platform to enable unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to help first responders better coordinate their efforts during emergency or disaster responses.
UT Arlington also is developing a universal plug-in hardware unit that can fit into any UAV to allow for this computing platform to be used.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is funding the research through a $1.8 million grant to UTA, University of North Texas, San Diego State University and the University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez. Yan Wan, a UT Arlington Distinguished University Professor in the Electrical Engineering Department, received more than $800,000 of that total.
“UAVs have become more and more integrated in our everyday lives,” Wan said. “They can do a lot of intelligent tasks. Now we must make them communicate with each other while they’re in the air and independent of a central computer management control.”
Networked airborne computing is a new computing concept that relies on an airborne network formed by aerial vehicles with direct flight-to-flight communication links to achieve real-time computing in the air.
“Our project should be able to transmit real-time videos to see what is happening during or immediately after a natural or manmade disaster,” Wan said. “Emergency crews can then be dispatched directly to where help is needed. They won’t have to go to a site, then search, then help people in need.”
Wan said her team has been working on this type of research for the last decade. She received a 2017 NSF grant of nearly $1 million to start a networked airborne computing platform for UAVs. Work on the project will be at the main UT Arlington campus and the UT Arlington Research Institute.
“What we’re trying to accomplish is having a system of robots in the air. They have to talk to each other to do that,” Wan said. “We’ve done field work with the Denton and Austin fire departments and have been quite successful in those trial operations.”
While Wan said the team is focusing on emergency use of UAVs during natural or manmade disasters, the research also has commercial applications.
“With so many companies in the business of delivering goods now, it could have an application there as well,” Wan said. “Think about coordinating many UAVs that are performing those deliveries. A universal control system that can plug into any UAV would go a long way toward coordination and ease of those deliveries.”
Diana Huffaker, UTA associate vice president for research, said the research reflects the marketplace and what is needed now with UAVs.
“Ensuring that transportation through the immediate airspace for emergency entities using UAVs is safe is essential to helping people,” Huffaker said. “Giving those emergency personnel the needed information for what they will face keeps them and the people they’re helping safe, and it streamlines emergency plans for rescue.”
Wan joined UT Arlington in 2016 and leads the Dynamical Networks and Control Lab, which develops solutions for the modeling, evaluation and control tasks in large-scale, dynamic networks and cyber-physical systems, with applications to air traffic management, airborne networking, systems biology and complex information systems. She received an NSF CAREER award in 2015 and has received more than $10 million in research funding.
END
Unmanned aerial vehicle tech aims to help first responders
Airborne computing platform would improve drone communication
2023-08-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New approach shows hydrogen can be combined with electricity to make pharmaceutical drugs
2023-08-21
MADISON – The world needs greener ways to make chemicals. In a new study, University of Wisconsin–Madison researchers demonstrate one potential path toward this goal by adapting hydrogen fuel cell technologies. These technologies are already used to power some electric vehicles, laptops and cell phones.
"The chemical industry is a massive energy consumer, and there is a big push to decarbonize the industry,” says Shannon Stahl, a professor in the UW–Madison Department of Chemistry who guided much of the research. “Renewable electricity can provide energy to produce chemicals with a much lower carbon footprint than burning fossil fuels.”
The ...
Want to know how light works? Try asking a mechanic
2023-08-21
Since the 17th century, when Isaac Newton and Christiaan Huygens first debated the nature of light, scientists have been puzzling over whether light is best viewed as a wave or a particle — or perhaps, at the quantum level, even both at once. Now, researchers at Stevens Institute of Technology have revealed a new connection between the two perspectives, using a 350-year-old mechanical theorem — ordinarily used to describe the movement of large, physical objects like pendulums and planets — to explain some ...
Ringing protons give insight into early universe
2023-08-21
NEWPORT NEWS, VA – In the middle of the last century, physicists found that protons can resonate, much like a ringing bell. Advances over the last three decades have led to 3D pictures of the proton and significant insight into its structure in its ground state. But little is known about the 3D structure of the resonating proton.
Now, an experiment to explore the 3D structures of resonances of protons and neutrons at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility has added one more puzzle piece to the vast ...
Some experts believe that routine mask-wearing should continue in health care settings
2023-08-21
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 21 August 2023
Annals of Internal Medicine Tip Sheet
@Annalsofim
Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.
----------------------------
1. Some experts believe that routine mask-wearing should continue in health ...
Research aims to uncover genetic and environmental risk factors of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
2023-08-21
DETROIT – Wanqing Liu, Ph.D., professor of pharmaceutical sciences in the Wayne State University Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences and of pharmacology in Wayne State’s School of Medicine, received a $3 million, five-year award from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health. The study, “Interaction between Genome and Heavy Metals in Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease,” aims to discover and validate the gene Х heavy metal (GXM) interactions in human livers ...
YALE NEWS: Additional COVID-19 boosters can benefit cancer patients—how often they should get them depends on their treatment
2023-08-21
New Haven, Conn. — For many, the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic seems over. However, for patients whose immune systems are compromised by cancer or by cancer therapies, fear of COVID-19 infection and severe disease remains very real.
Currently, CDC guidance recommends that immunocompromised patients receive COVID-19 booster shots “as needed.” While this flexibility is useful for patients with complex medical conditions, more specific guidance is lacking as to when additional COVID-19 boosting would be most effective.
New ...
Aggressive luminal breast cancer: Are cis-spliced fusion proteins pathological?
2023-08-21
“Our findings may provide a useful therapeutic approach for treating breast cancer patients who may suffer from early relapse and intrinsic resistance.”
BUFFALO, NY- August 16, 2023 – A new editorial paper was published in Oncotarget's Volume 14 on June 12, 2023, entitled, “Are cis-spliced fusion proteins pathological in more aggressive luminal breast cancer?”
A vast majority of breast cancers (~70%) are estrogen receptor-alpha positive (ER+), for which endocrine therapy is the common ...
Eye scans detect signs of Parkinson’s disease up to seven years before diagnosis
2023-08-21
Markers that indicate the presence of Parkinson’s disease in patients on average seven years before clinical presentation have been identified by a UCL and Moorfields Eye Hospital research team.
This is the first time anyone has shown these findings several years before diagnosis, and these results were made possible by the largest study to date on retinal imaging in Parkinson’s disease.
The study, published today in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, identified markers of Parkinson’s in eye scans with the help of artificial ...
Did sabertooth tigers purr or roar?
2023-08-21
When a sabertooth tiger called out, what noise did it make – a mighty roar or a throaty purr? A new study from North Carolina State University examined the data behind the arguments for each vocalization and found that the answer was more nuanced than they thought – and that it could depend on the shape of a few small bones.
Modern cats belong to one of two groups: either the pantherine “big cats,” including the roaring lions, tigers and jaguars; or Felinae “little cats,” which include purring ...
Thinning ice sheets may drive sharp rise in subglacial waters
2023-08-21
Two Georgia Tech researchers, Alex Robel and Shi Joyce Sim, have collaborated on a new model for how water moves under glaciers. The new theory shows that up to twice the amount of subglacial water that was originally predicted might be draining into the ocean – potentially increasing glacial melt, sea level rise, and biological disturbances.
The paper, published in Science Advances, “Contemporary Ice Sheet Thinning Drives Subglacial Groundwater Exfiltration with Potential Feedbacks on Glacier Flow”, is co-authored by Colin Meyer (Dartmouth), Matthew Siegfried (Colorado School of Mines), and Chloe Gustafson (USGS).
While there are pre-existing methods to understand ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New study: Short-lived soda tax reinforces alternative presumptions on tax impacts on consumer behaviors
Fewer than 1 in 5 know the 988 suicide lifeline
Semaglutide eligibility across all current indications for US adults
Can podcasts create healthier habits?
Zerlasiran—A small-interfering RNA targeting lipoprotein(a)
Anti-obesity drugs, lifestyle interventions show cardiovascular benefits beyond weight loss
Oral muvalaplin for lowering of lipoprotein(a)
Revealing the hidden costs of what we eat
New therapies at Kennedy Krieger offer effective treatment for managing Tourette syndrome
American soil losing more nutrients for crops due to heavier rainstorms, study shows
With new imaging approach, ADA Forsyth scientists closely analyze microbial adhesive interactions
Global antibiotic consumption has increased by more than 21 percent since 2016
New study shows how social bonds help tool-using monkeys learn new skills
Modeling and analysis reveals technological, environmental challenges to increasing water recovery from desalination
Navy’s Airborne Scientific Development Squadron welcomes new commander
TāStation®'s analytical power used to resolve a central question about sweet taste perception
NASA awards SwRI $60 million contract to develop next-generation coronagraphs
Reducing antimicrobial resistance: accelerated efforts are needed to meet the EU targets
Gaming for the good!
Early adoption of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor in patients hospitalized with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction
New study finds atrial fibrillation common in newly diagnosed heart failure patients, and makes prognosis significantly worse
Chitnis receives funding for study of wearable ultrasound systems
Weisburd receives funding for safer stronger together initiative
Kaya advancing AI literacy
Wang studying effects of micronutrient supplementation
Quandela, the CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay and Université Paris Cité join forces to accelerate research and innovation in quantum photonics
Pulmonary vein isolation with optimized linear ablation vs pulmonary vein isolation alone for persistent AF
New study finds prognostic value of coronary calcium scores effective in predicting risk of heart attack and overall mortality in both women and men
New fossil reveals the evolution of flying reptiles
Redefining net zero will not stop global warming – scientists say
[Press-News.org] Unmanned aerial vehicle tech aims to help first respondersAirborne computing platform would improve drone communication