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Terramechanics Models for Lunar Robotics Applications | Dan Negrut | University of Wisconsin-Madison

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ISTVS

Professor Negrut's lab has worked on several projects aimed at improving the mobility of autonomous rovers operating in lunar conditions. In this context, the talk will cover two main topics: it presents an overview of terramechanics models in robotics, and it briefly describes the sensing used in lunar mobility simulations. The latter aspect involves simulating camera operations on the Moon for the autonomy stack design. All simulations are done in Project Chrono, an opensource multiphysics simulation platform (http://www.projectchrono.org/)


Dan Negrut received his Mechanical Engineering Ph.D. in 1998 from the University of Iowa. He spent six years working as a software developer in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In 2004 he served as an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He spent 2005 as a Visiting Scientist at Argonne National Laboratory in the Mathematics and Computer Science Division. At the end of 2005 Dan joined the Mechanical Engineering faculty at the University of WisconsinMadison. His interests are in Computational Science, and he coleads the SimulationBased Engineering Lab (http://sbel.wisc.edu). Dan received a National Science Foundation Career Award in 2009. Since 2010 he has been an NVIDIA CUDA Fellow. He is one of the technical leads of Project Chrono (http://www.projectchrono.org/). Check out their yearly conference at https://sbel.wisc.edu/magic/.

Faculty page: https://sbel.wisc.edu/negrutdan/
LinkedIn:   / dannegrut89320719  


The mission of the ISTVS is to advance the knowledge of terrainvehicle systems for improvements in engineering practice and for innovation. Since 1962.

posted by incalminss8