Khepera mobile robot

A Khepera III robot at the Georgia Institute of Technology
The first generation Khepera robot released in 1996

The Khepera is a small (5.5 cm) differential wheeled mobile robot that was developed at the LAMI laboratory of Prof. Jean-Daniel Nicoud at EPFL (Lausanne, Switzerland) in the mid '90s. It was developed by Edo. Franzi, Francesco Mondada, André Guignard and others.

Small, fast, and architectured around a Motorola 68331, it has served researchers for 10 years, widely used by over 500 universities worldwide.

Scientific impact

The Khepera was sold to a thousand research labs and featured on the cover of the 31 August 2000 issue of Nature.[1] It appeared again in a 2003 article .

A Google scholar search with khepera mobile robots returns 4800 hits . The Khepera helped in the emergence of evolutionary robotics .

Technical details

Original version


2.0 Version

Extensions

Several extension turrets exist for the Khepera, including:

References

  1. linked with the article of Michael J. B. Krieger, Jean-Bernard Billeter and Laurent Keller.
Notes
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.