April 1, 2009 2:24 PM PDT

Audio slideshow: Building bots for sport

by James Martin
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 1 comment

Teams from around Northern California gathered this week at the University of California at Davis for the FIRST Robotics Competition, an event in which high school engineers design and build robots that must complete technical tasks throughout the games. (More details after the jump.)

This year's game, called Lunacy, was played on a 27x54-foot field known as the "crater." The contest required robots to perform both autonomously and under the control of a pilot, scoring points against opposing robots. Alliances of three teams were positioned on either end of the playing field, which was covered with a slick polymer material called Regalif which, along with low-traction wheels on the robots, simulates the effect of driving in 1/6th gravity on the surface of the moon. The objective of the game is to get as many of the three types of game pieces--"moon rocks," "empty cells," and "super cells"--into the opposing team's trailers.

FIRST, the nonprofit organizer of the event, was founded in 1989 to inspire young people's interest and participation in science and technology. The charity designs accessible, innovative programs it hopes will motivate young people to pursue education and career opportunities in science, technology, engineering, and math, while building self confidence, knowledge, and life skills.

In recent years, the games have become more advanced, demanding a higher degree of technicality from the students. The knowledge required to build a competitive bot range from design and engineering skills to machining and programming skills. Some teams, encouraged by FIRST to innovate with their designs, even have complex cameras and tracking systems built into their robots for the first time.

As you'll see in the audio slideshow above, the teams have built some pretty incredible technology for high school students, showing a level of sophistication far beyond the boring days of science fairs and erector sets.

James is a photographer for CNET News.
Recent posts from Cutting Edge
Three station fliers set off on flight to lab complex
Undersea robot captures rare deep-sea eruption
Japanese robot helps out with grocery shopping
Predator drones hacked in Iraq operations
A trip to the Boeing 787 Dreamliner Gallery
Can we diagnose and destroy cancer in one sitting?
MIT unveils new 'smart' bike wheel
New technology makes for more accurate guns
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by ChandonPierre April 1, 2009 2:54 PM PDT
Yup, our team participated in the regionals at Hofstra.
I have all the pictures I took uploaded to a Picasa Web Album - Heres the link if you would like too take a look.

http://picasaweb.google.com/chandonpierre
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Behind the scenes: NORAD's Santa tracker

For decades, the defense group has let you follow the Christmas Eve travels of the jolly old elf. These days, technology is playing a bigger role than ever.

Intel redesigns Atom chip for Netbooks

The chipmaker officially announces the next generation of its popular Atom CPUs for Netbooks, the N450, weeks before the CES trade show.

About Cutting Edge

Keep up-to-date on cutting-edge research and what's new in a wide range of areas from robotics, space ventures and general science to automobile design and solar energy.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Cutting Edge topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right