Published: Aug. 19, 2019 By

DARPA Subterranean Challenge Tunnel Circuit Event

The CU Boulder MARBLE team gathers around their underground drone at the Tunnel Circuit Event at NIOSH Coal Mine in Pennsylvania, the first of three challenges led by DARPA.ÌýÌý

On August 9, Professor Sean Humbert and collaboratorsÌýspent the day doing final testing onÌýtheir underground drone at Colorado School of Mines Edgar Experimental MineÌýbefore heading to Pittsburgh, PA for the first of three increasingly difficult underground search and rescue challenges.ÌýIn fall 2018, Humbert and his team received a

This week, Humbert's team known as MARBLE andÌý11 other teams are engaging in the first of three DARPA subterranean challenges. They will be sending drones on a mock search and rescue operation down miles of NIOSH Coal Mine steam tunnels in Pittsburgh, part of the Tunnel Circuit Event.ÌýThe goalÌýis to autonomously navigate and map these unknown spaces;Ìýcorrectly identify DARPA-specified artifacts which includeÌýbackpacks, fire extinguishers, and other relevant items; and report artifactÌýpositions and three-dimensionalÌýmaps to DARPA during eachÌýdeployment.

"It'sÌýa significant challenge due to austere conditions such as mud, rocky terrain and low light,Ìýlack of GPSÌýand poor device communications," said Humbert. "We are excited to be in second place out of 11 teams after the first two days of deployments."

The competition will continue through the week and will be .Ìý

After the close of the Tunnel Circuit Event, the teams have two more subterranean challenges to go before they are finished. In six months, they will graduate to larger tunnels, such as those that make up the New York subway system. As theirÌýfinal challenge, they will navigate natural caves which add hazards, including mud, rocks and potential cave-ins. The DARPA Subterranean Challenge is set to end in fall 2021.Ìý

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