|
Virtual Dictionary
Swarming Micro Air Vehicle A swarming micro air vehicle, or SMAV is an autonomous or nearly autonomous micro air vehicle or MAV whose AI has been instructed to fly in formation with other SMAVs. They are typically used in situations where AI teamwork is required, and are a form of Multi-Agent System. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
Related Dictionary
Entries for Swarming Micro Air Vehicle:
Resources
in our database matching the Term Swarming Micro Air Vehicle:
The Media Vehicle, is a serious take on VR interfacing, however it is not a serious commercial device. The unit is, for lack of a better phrase, an ?art tool?. It exists to showcase what is currently possible in 2009, not as a device which expects a practical market. ![]() ![]() Complete Website: Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (J2ME)
The development centre for J2ME, one of the latest, and brightest of Mobile Phone development systems.
![]() ![]() ![]() One of the strangest things you notice with social virtual environments, where you have vast numbers of people coming and going, and using the exact same software to visualise the virtual world, is the sheer number of amazing, unduplicatable-by-anyone-else problems that are encountered. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Industry
News containing the Term Swarming Micro Air Vehicle:
Results by page (14/04/2009)
A U of Waterloo engineering research team has developed the world's first flying micro-robot capable of manipulating objects for microscale applications. It hovers by levitating, powered by a magnetic field, and dexterously...
(28/05/2009)
Aimed at solving the problem of how to get a big picture out of a small device, micro-projectors cast a large image (typically about 125 centimeters wide) onto a nearby wall or surface to show photos, documents, maps, or video. Several micr...
(01/08/2010)
Not every engineering dean wants a live bee colony outside of his office, but such is the case at the Clark School of Engineering at the University of Maryland, College Park. Researchers in a lab down the hall from the dean'...
(01/08/2009)
There is a long held belief among engineers and biologists that micro flying robots that fly like airplanes and helicopters consume much more energy than micro robots that fly like flies. A new study now shows that a fly wing that spins lik...
(06/09/2013)
Researchers in China have developed a mathematical model that could help engineers design a flexible vehicle-arrest system for stopping cars involved in criminal activity or terrorism, such as suspect car bombers attempting break through a ...
|