Short Course Offers Opportunity to Build and Fly Drones
Uncrewed aerial systems (UAS) are becoming an important part of the modern world, especially in the industry- and defense-oriented Southern Maryland community. Drones are used by everyone from military personnel, to farmers, to photographers. Because of this, the University of Maryland (UMD) MATRIX Lab held a short course focusing on relevant skills related to aerial autonomy. “How to Build, Fly, and Verify Autonomous Aerial Systems” was held in the USMSM SMART Building this summer and led by UMD faculty member Dr. Mumu Xu. Dr. Xu is an associate professor with a joint appointment in Aerospace Engineering and the Institute for Systems Research. Experts from the UMD UAS Research and Operations Center (UROC) supported the course, including Lead Engineer Josh Gaus. Topics covered included:
“We wanted to provide a course that touched on all the aspects of autonomy for drones,” Dr. Xu said. “We focused on topics you may not learn just by working on a project or taking a programming class.”
“One of the main concepts we wanted to convey was the need to understand the basic mechanics of the aircraft and how it works at the flight controller level of automation,” said Gaus. “Students could then successfully integrate higher level AI decision making into these types of platforms.”
“I work in autonomy and AI and some of these topics really come up. We’re looking at distributed swarm systems and autonomous vehicles and how that can be part of a larger system so I think it was interesting to see how the UAVs can be flown, but I’m also interested in how you integrate some of those machine learning models into that,” said Kevin Mahoney, a U.S. government employee who took the course. “I’ve had a little bit of exposure - I’ve always been interested in autonomous flight.” “There’s always theory to the course, but this course had a practical portion to it as well. The skills learned could be applied to a hobbyist,” said Jim V., a NAWCAD employee who took the course. “I plan to use the essential techniques that were learned from the course for work and home.” Participants also learned the basics of Robot Operating System (ROS), a suite that helps with developing robot software, and how they can use it to add aspects of autonomy to a drone, like motion planning, object detection, and obstacle avoidance.
“I appreciated the opportunity to develop my own course. It was so rewarding to watch the participants grow as industry professionals, and the experience I gained from teaching them was invaluable,” Dr. Xu said.
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