Stuart Michelson

GTRI Researcher Accepts Senate Resolution Honoring Collegiate Robotics Competition

04.25.2016

The Georgia State Senate adopted a resolution recognizing a national collegiate robotics competition which will take place at Georgia Tech. Stuart Michelson, a researcher with the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI), accepted the resolution, which was adopted in March 2016.

Georgia Senate Resolution 1255 recognizes the International Aerial Robotics Competition (IARC) for its “past 25 years and six completed missions, IARC has fostered international technology research developments through undergraduate and graduate teams from universities across the United States, Canada, China, Europe, Africa, Australia.”

Michelson is the organizer of the American venue of the IARC, which will be hosted at Georgia Tech’s McAmish Pavilion in August.

“The Senate recognized the competition for advancing the state-of-the-art in aerial robotics forward for the past 25 years,” said Michelson, a researcher within GTRI’s Electronic Systems Laboratory (ELSYS). “On several occasions, many of these missions were deemed ‘impossible’ at time of their proposal.”

Since its first competition in 1991 at Georgia Tech, IARC competition has produced advances using fully autonomous aerial robots in the following categories: 

  • Navigation
  • Vision
  • Mapping
  • Indoor/outdoor flight
  • Obstacle avoidance

The 2016 competition includes 40 teams representing eight countries at the American venue. For more information, visit aerialroboticscompetition.org.

Newsletter

Sign up for monthly updates on GTRI’s research, activity, and more.

Related News

News stories
The Georgia Tech Research Institute's Cyber Technology and Information Security Laboratory (CTISL) and the San Antonio field office presented leather bomber jackets to the winning CyberPatriot team at the Mayor’s Cyber Cup Luncheon for the third year in a row.
News stories
Thanks to an MFD/MPD emulator developed by the Georgia Tech Research Institute in collaboration with the Army Reprogramming Analysis Team, testing can now be done on ordinary laboratory computers.
News stories
Georgia Tech’s Center for the Development and Application of Internet of Things Technologies (CDAIT) has added Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS) to its growing list of members and launched four new working groups.