Robot on board — The robot "Athena" carries new impulses for robotics research in its luggage

The scientists of the Autonomous Motion Department at the Tübingen MPI for Intelligent Systems welcome the new robot Athena. Picture: C.Däfler / MPI IS

The Fukushima disaster has demonstrated how far away robotics research still is from creating useful systems for our daily life. There remains a lack of understanding of autonomous systems that can reliably perform useful activities, like opening doors, closing valves or operating a pump, – such tasks were important in Fukushima.

Worldwide, researchers and engineers are working on the development of novel robots that can act rationally and independently depending on the situation – as in destroyed power plant buildings or in earthquake zones. This is a formidable task.

Flying Athena home

This brings Athena into play. The humanoid robot, measuring 1,88 m in height and weighing only 48kg, stands on two legs with feet. Together with his team, Stefan Schaal, director of the “Autonomous Motion” department at the MPI for Intelligent Systems in Tübingen, has formulated ideas and specifications, which guided the development by the US robotics company Sarcos.

Athena’s development at Sarcos was initiated by a US funding program for Robotics in Disaster Response (DARPA Robotics Challenge), in collaboration with the Californian partner laboratory of Professor Schaal at the University of Southern California, where he helds a professorship for Computer Science, Neuroscience, & Biomedical Engineering.
While the DARPA program focuses largely on teleoperated robots, the aim of the Max Planck Institute’s research goes far beyond: it would like to achieve truly autonomous robots, or even ones that are able to learn themselves.

Athena was designed as a humanoid (human-like) robot in order to be able to work with tools for humans in man-built environments. Unlike four-legged or wheeled creatures, bipeds have the advantage that they can pass more easily through narrow passages, can perform activities that are on the floor or high up (e.g., shift levers or fix a light bulb), climb ladders, or even operate a car. Of course, research is just beginning to bring robots to such domains.

On December 16, 2014, at 11:05 am, Athena has arrived in Frankfurt with a Boeing 747-8 (Lufthansa flight LH 457). Accompanied by scientists Dr. Jeannette Bohg and Alexander Herzog, she has spent the flight almost like a normal passenger in the cabin. But of course she has neither eaten, drunk nor visited the restroom. Athena traveled completely passive, i.e. without any energy source. Her travel companions have brought her to the plane in a wheelchair. In the same way the robot leaves the plane in Frankfurt and enters into a minibus, riding “home” – to the department of “Autonomous Motion” at the MPI for Intelligent Systems in Tübingen. There, the scientists will teach her walking over uneven terrain as one of the first skills in the coming months.

A new humanoid robot – rather a helper for disasters than a nurse

The robot is full of technical finesse. Its head is equipped with sensors enabling to detect its environment. A stereo camera system works quite similar to our eyes. From two images it calculates three-dimensional depth images. Thus Athena can determine, for example, the position of objects to grasp in the vicinity. Responsible for long range vision is a Velodyne laser scanner, which resembles a small lighthouse on the head. This sensor sends out 32 fan-like laser beams and, from the reflected light, it calculates the distance from surfaces. With a range of 80 m, the laser scanner rotates 10 times per second around the vertical axis and thus scans the entire environment around the robot.

In Tübingen, Athena will get an inertial sensor for balance control mounted on the upper body — similar sensors are in the human inner ear. It will detect the orientation of the robot and its accelerations, which are important to understand what is up or down, i.e., the direction of gravity. Athena still has to wait a few more weeks for her real arms, because they are still in production. Currently she is wearing prototype plastic arms that were printed with a 3D printer in Tübingen. These arms can be moved by hand only and have no sensors, but they allow researchers to evaluate the design.

Athena's legs are very agile. Her hip and knee joints move hydraulically, with oil at high pressure (200 bar). Sensors at all joints measure the position and torques of each joint and transmit the data to the software, which in turn controls the movement of the joints by hydraulic valves. Athena stands on foot prostheses developed by Otto Bock for humans. The carbon fiber material of the prosthesis allows a suitable spring behavior for running on two legs, and it makes the legs very light. Athena is the first humanoid robot to use such prosthetic feet.

The movement of the joints under its own weight takes the most energy. A large laboratory pump generates a high-pressure oil flow that is directed with hoses to the robot to move the joints. That means, the robot is energetically not autonomous, and currently needs an external hydraulic supply. In the future, this will be directly integrated into Athena. In contrast, the electronics and the sensors need relatively little energy, which is provided by an external electric power supply.

Athena is a machine – and it looks like one. It is not the prototype assistive robot that will help in the hospital or will support the elderly in coping with their everyday lives.
Stefan Schaal explains: “Athena is the robot who saves people from the collapsed house or that is sent into the woods to look for the six-year-old Thomas, who has lost his way. Athena is intended for physical work in complicated terrain, which is possibly inaccessible or too dangerous for humans.“

Athena has a lot to learn

The robot is brand new and, so far, it can only perform rudimentary movements. It will take a few more months until it will be able to autonomously walk and balance. Mid-term objective of the Tübingen scientists is to run the robot over rough terrain or obstacles.
Longer-term goals include, among other things, whole body coordination to grasp and manipulate objects, or to move through tight spaces. For these tasks, Athena must be able to maintain balance, to stretch and reach for something, or possibly to independently get up again after falling over. A prerequisite for this is the correct perception of the environment.

To achieve these goals, researchers have to invest a lot of time in basic research and development. The fundamental principles that lie behind the human ability to perform these seemingly simple tasks are still largely unknown today.
“It is important that in the future the robot can safely move even in difficult terrain,” says Stefan Schaal. “Our research is specifically concerned with autonomous perception, control and learning in such futuristic systems. We hope that one day the robot can really help in complex outdoor tasks, for example, in an emergency, in space, for assistance during epidemics, or other situations, like fire, people search, weather catastrophes, etc. – i. e., pretty much anything where systems on wheels can not be used. Of course, these are all visions for the future, and to achieve that, we have a lot of research ahead of us.”

The Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems is grateful for the support provided by Deutsche Lufthansa AG, including help from the employees in both Los Angeles, CA, USA and in Frankfurt, Germany.

The Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Germany

Founded: 2011

Our goal is to understand the principles of Perception, Action and Learning in autonomous systems that successfully interact with complex environments and to use this understanding to design future systems.

The Institute studies these principles in biological, computational, hybrid, and material systems ranging from nano to macro scales.We take a highly interdisciplinary approach that combines mathematics, computation, material science, and biology.

The MPI for Intelligent Systems has campuses in Stuttgart and Tübingen. The Tübingen campus focuses on how intelligent systems process information to perceive, act and learn. Our Stuttgart campus has world-leading expertise in small-scale intelligent systems that leverage novel material science and biology.

The Tübingen Campus for Intelligent Systems consists of the following departments:

Autonomous Motion (Stefan Schaal): http://www-amd.is.tuebingen.mpg.de

Empirical Inference (Bernhard Schölkopf): http://ei.is.tuebingen.mpg.de

Perceiving Systems (Michael J. Black): http://ps.is.tuebingen.mpg.de

http://www.is.tuebingen.mpg.de
http://www-amd.is.tuebingen.mpg.de

Media Contact

Claudia Däfler Max-Planck-Institut für Intelligente Systeme

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