Robots Compete In Navigating Simulation Of Japan's Fukushima Daiichi Plant
schwit1 writes: A new DARPA Robotics Challenge completed its final competition recently. 25 teams operated robots around a landscape designed to simulate the hazardous environment that aid workers found after the Fukushima Daiichi reactor in Japan melted down multiple times in 2011. Engineers tried to help, but disaster ensued, rendering a huge area around the plant uninhabitable after toxic steam was released into the skies. The radioactive leftovers are still emitting a million watts of heat. First prize is $2m, second prize is $1m, and third gets $500,000.
after the Fukushima Daiichi reactor in Japan melted down multiple times
Umm...no. Fukushima Daiichi was a station that had multiple reactors (six). Reactor units 1-3 suffered individual meltdowns, and unit 4 suffered a fire due to cooling water loss in the storage pond. Units 5 and 6 were damaged but were already in cold shutdown when the tsunami occurred.
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telephone sanitizers
Those produce something useful.
Sorry - you are of course, quite right. I have indeed enjoyed having my telephone sanitized, by a specialist with the proper tools, on numerous occasions.
But their inclusion on the list was obligatory really - it's a B-Ark thing :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
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Any system is going to have to be pneumatic and fiber optic in nature. Electronics fail in high radiation environments.
Every robot we've sent in there breaks in minutes if not seconds.
If your motors are all pneumatic actuators like what you see with big dog, then they won't fail when subjected to that kind of radiation.
Your only issue will be getting information from the robot to your command station so you can see what is going on. And the solution there is to use fiber optics. The fiber optics will transmit light into the reactor from the robot and other fiber optics will put up the reflected light to be processed by the command station.
Possibly SOME electronics that are VERY simple will work in a high radiation environment. But nothing complicated has survived. The whole push to miniaturize stuff is counter productive when dealing with radiation.
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