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The IIT Bombay robotics team is doing something hardly any Indian has done before

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Underwater research is a field explored very little in India unlike countries such as USA, China and Singapore. In such a scenario, IIT Bombay's robotic team AUV-IITB has created something no-one has truly accomplished before by developing a truly autonomous underwater vehicle.
main-image_305_011317122520.jpg


Underwater research is a field explored very little in India unlike countries such as USA, China and Singapore. There are only a few student groups and organisations such as Larsen and Toubro and DRDO which are working on developing underwater robot operated vehicles (ROVs and autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). It is high time that more Indian students start working towards making impactful developments in underwater research.

In this strain, students from IIT- Bombay are making the country extremely proud by bringing in laurels from international competitions on underwater robotics. IIT Bombay's AUV development team is continuing work on their autonomous underwater vehicle-MATSYA, which became the runners up in Robosub 2016 and grabbed the first prize in NIOT SAVe 2016, two of the most prestigious competitions looking for the next big AUV that can have crucial applications.

image-2_011317114443.png
What makes this AUV so special?
AUV IITB is trying to do something no one in India has ever done before. They are trying to create an AUV which can perform a variety of tasks and moreover, is intelligent enough to reattempt a task if it fails at the first attempt. This is what makes it truly autonomous.

matsya-4_011317123324.jpg

applications_011317124253.jpg


Who does the team comprise?

The AUV-IITB team was formed in 2011 to develop cutting edge technology for autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) for India. "There were only a couple of universities viz DTU and IIT Madras who were into making AUVs at the time," said Varun Mittal, the leader of the AUV-IITB team.

The 25-strong team comprises passionate and driven freshmen, undergrads and postgraduates from various fields of engineering such as Mechanical, Electrical, Software, Aerospace, Material Science and Civil at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay.

"The team was present before we started making AUVs. We used to make intelligent and autonomous ground vehicles and participated in the Robocon competition to test and showcase the capabilities of the bot. But having realised the huge potential underwater robotics offer especially in our country we started our journey and started to make AUVs," said Mittal.

the-team-2_011317113342.jpg
How are the team members selected?
"Every year, we recruit new people (primarily freshmen) after two rigorous rounds of selection and lose passing out final year students. So, the team members keep rotating. At present the team strength is of 25 members. But this keeps varying from 23-30 members," Mittal informed.

The senior most members, team leaders Varun Mittal and Sandeep Dhakad have been a part of the team only from its third year. The AUV-IITB team has evolved quite a bit through the years and none of the present team members were there in its first two years and yet, their excellence is reflected in their performance at the top competitions.

Team sub divisions:
Since developing an AUV is a year-long process involving working on the design, assembling the parts, manufacturing, testing, integration, and preparing for competitions, the team developing MATSYA is divided into Mechanical, Electrical and Software subdivisions for a smoother work process. The software group works on the code, the electrical section develops the firmware, while the mechanical team decides the vehicle frame and dynamics.

achievements_011317124253.jpg
About the competitions targeted by AUV-IITB
1. Robosub competition

The IITB AUV team mainly works towards showcasing their invention at the annual AUVSI International Robosub Competition held at San Diego, California. At the competition organised by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle System International (AUVSI) and cosponsored by the US Office of Naval Research, students from all over the world can showcase their skills and ideas in the field of underwater robotics and connect with industries working on the same lines.

To participate, each multifaceted engineering team is expected to build an AUV that can perform certain predefined tasks, usually simulating real-life problems that the navy faces on rescue missions or underwater exploration. The capability of the developed AUV shows the expertise of the team members in their chosen fields of engineering.

Robosub 2016, held in July in San Diego, California, saw more than 45 universities from around the world compete against each other to decide the most effective autonomous submarine. With Matsya being the only submarine to be able to successfully attempt two of the given tasks, AUV-IITB bagged the second place.

publications_011317123324.jpg


2. NIOT SAVe competition

The National NIOT SAVe Competition is organised by the National Institute of Technology under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, along with IEEE OES. NIOT SAVe 2016 was AUV-IITB's debut in this competition and it walked away with the first position among 14 teams.

The occurrence of the Vardah Cyclone right before the competition date of December 14 was a setback which the team proved wrong. "The venue as well as the problem statement got changed. It gave us no time for practising as well, as there was no power source too," says Varun. Even without access to powered laptops and just half a day's practice, AUV-IITB outperformed its competitors.

Watch Matsya's performance in NIOT SAVe 2016:

"The two competitions have a similar problem statement. So, the preliminary preparation is the same for both the competitions. But the level of competitors was much more in Robosub as there were teams from all around the world. Some had been making AUVs since the past 15 years," says Varun regarding which competition seemed to be the tougher catch.

"Having said this, the exposure we get in both the competitions is irreplaceable as each team has a unique way of designing and dealing with problems from which one can always learn," he added.

The cap on funds
Owing to India's low focus on underwater research, the AUV-IITB team is low on funds. Though they are funded by IIT, there is an upper cap on the funding and they are on the lookout for external funding and support to develop their AUV according to their vision.

You can visit Ketto's crowdfunding website to donate towards MATSYA's development: ketto.org/fundraiser/AUV-IITB_Matsya

"As a team, we have seen a lot of people who want to help/support us as much as they can. Ketto's Crowdfunding platform provides an opportunity to all such people who believe in us and in our efforts to make Matsya the best AUV of the world. It will help us raise funds for some components which can invest in for long term benefits. This will make the AUV more capable and it will have more scope of improvement compared to its predecessors," says Varun.

iit_011317113342.jpg


Watch Matsya in action here:

Such brilliant student researchers are the future of India. Here's wishing AUV-IITB the very best for their endeavours!

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/education/story/iitb-auv-invention/1/856346.html
 
Hopefully India will be first next time.
And the IIT team gets more funding.

List of winners.

1st place: California Institute of Technology: $6,000 (USA)
2nd place: Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay: $5,000 (INDIA)
3rd place: Cornell University: $2,000 (USA)
4th place: G.I. Nevelskoy Maritime State University: $1,500 (RUSSIA)
5th place: Kasetsart University & Chulalongkorn University: $1,500 (THAILAND)
6th place; Harbin Engineering University: $1,000 (CHINA)
7th place: McGill University: $1,000 (CANADA)
 
Hopefully India will be first next time.
And the IIT team gets more funding.

List of winners.

1st place: California Institute of Technology: $6,000 (USA)
2nd place: Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay: $5,000 (INDIA)
3rd place: Cornell University: $2,000 (USA)
4th place: G.I. Nevelskoy Maritime State University: $1,500 (RUSSIA)
5th place: Kasetsart University & Chulalongkorn University: $1,500 (THAILAND)
6th place; Harbin Engineering University: $1,000 (CHINA)
7th place: McGill University: $1,000 (CANADA)


Congratulations, India!
 
Underwater research is a field explored very little in India unlike countries such as USA, China and Singapore. In such a scenario, IIT Bombay's robotic team AUV-IITB has created something no-one has truly accomplished before by developing a truly autonomous underwater vehicle.
main-image_305_011317122520.jpg


Underwater research is a field explored very little in India unlike countries such as USA, China and Singapore. There are only a few student groups and organisations such as Larsen and Toubro and DRDO which are working on developing underwater robot operated vehicles (ROVs and autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). It is high time that more Indian students start working towards making impactful developments in underwater research.

In this strain, students from IIT- Bombay are making the country extremely proud by bringing in laurels from international competitions on underwater robotics. IIT Bombay's AUV development team is continuing work on their autonomous underwater vehicle-MATSYA, which became the runners up in Robosub 2016 and grabbed the first prize in NIOT SAVe 2016, two of the most prestigious competitions looking for the next big AUV that can have crucial applications.

image-2_011317114443.png
What makes this AUV so special?
AUV IITB is trying to do something no one in India has ever done before. They are trying to create an AUV which can perform a variety of tasks and moreover, is intelligent enough to reattempt a task if it fails at the first attempt. This is what makes it truly autonomous.

matsya-4_011317123324.jpg

applications_011317124253.jpg


Who does the team comprise?

The AUV-IITB team was formed in 2011 to develop cutting edge technology for autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) for India. "There were only a couple of universities viz DTU and IIT Madras who were into making AUVs at the time," said Varun Mittal, the leader of the AUV-IITB team.

The 25-strong team comprises passionate and driven freshmen, undergrads and postgraduates from various fields of engineering such as Mechanical, Electrical, Software, Aerospace, Material Science and Civil at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay.

"The team was present before we started making AUVs. We used to make intelligent and autonomous ground vehicles and participated in the Robocon competition to test and showcase the capabilities of the bot. But having realised the huge potential underwater robotics offer especially in our country we started our journey and started to make AUVs," said Mittal.

the-team-2_011317113342.jpg
How are the team members selected?
"Every year, we recruit new people (primarily freshmen) after two rigorous rounds of selection and lose passing out final year students. So, the team members keep rotating. At present the team strength is of 25 members. But this keeps varying from 23-30 members," Mittal informed.

The senior most members, team leaders Varun Mittal and Sandeep Dhakad have been a part of the team only from its third year. The AUV-IITB team has evolved quite a bit through the years and none of the present team members were there in its first two years and yet, their excellence is reflected in their performance at the top competitions.

Team sub divisions:
Since developing an AUV is a year-long process involving working on the design, assembling the parts, manufacturing, testing, integration, and preparing for competitions, the team developing MATSYA is divided into Mechanical, Electrical and Software subdivisions for a smoother work process. The software group works on the code, the electrical section develops the firmware, while the mechanical team decides the vehicle frame and dynamics.

achievements_011317124253.jpg
About the competitions targeted by AUV-IITB
1. Robosub competition

The IITB AUV team mainly works towards showcasing their invention at the annual AUVSI International Robosub Competition held at San Diego, California. At the competition organised by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle System International (AUVSI) and cosponsored by the US Office of Naval Research, students from all over the world can showcase their skills and ideas in the field of underwater robotics and connect with industries working on the same lines.

To participate, each multifaceted engineering team is expected to build an AUV that can perform certain predefined tasks, usually simulating real-life problems that the navy faces on rescue missions or underwater exploration. The capability of the developed AUV shows the expertise of the team members in their chosen fields of engineering.

Robosub 2016, held in July in San Diego, California, saw more than 45 universities from around the world compete against each other to decide the most effective autonomous submarine. With Matsya being the only submarine to be able to successfully attempt two of the given tasks, AUV-IITB bagged the second place.

publications_011317123324.jpg


2. NIOT SAVe competition

The National NIOT SAVe Competition is organised by the National Institute of Technology under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, along with IEEE OES. NIOT SAVe 2016 was AUV-IITB's debut in this competition and it walked away with the first position among 14 teams.

The occurrence of the Vardah Cyclone right before the competition date of December 14 was a setback which the team proved wrong. "The venue as well as the problem statement got changed. It gave us no time for practising as well, as there was no power source too," says Varun. Even without access to powered laptops and just half a day's practice, AUV-IITB outperformed its competitors.

Watch Matsya's performance in NIOT SAVe 2016:

"The two competitions have a similar problem statement. So, the preliminary preparation is the same for both the competitions. But the level of competitors was much more in Robosub as there were teams from all around the world. Some had been making AUVs since the past 15 years," says Varun regarding which competition seemed to be the tougher catch.

"Having said this, the exposure we get in both the competitions is irreplaceable as each team has a unique way of designing and dealing with problems from which one can always learn," he added.

The cap on funds
Owing to India's low focus on underwater research, the AUV-IITB team is low on funds. Though they are funded by IIT, there is an upper cap on the funding and they are on the lookout for external funding and support to develop their AUV according to their vision.

You can visit Ketto's crowdfunding website to donate towards MATSYA's development: ketto.org/fundraiser/AUV-IITB_Matsya

"As a team, we have seen a lot of people who want to help/support us as much as they can. Ketto's Crowdfunding platform provides an opportunity to all such people who believe in us and in our efforts to make Matsya the best AUV of the world. It will help us raise funds for some components which can invest in for long term benefits. This will make the AUV more capable and it will have more scope of improvement compared to its predecessors," says Varun.

iit_011317113342.jpg


Watch Matsya in action here:

Such brilliant student researchers are the future of India. Here's wishing AUV-IITB the very best for their endeavours!

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/education/story/iitb-auv-invention/1/856346.html
I have met few of them in 2012 November IIT Bombay tech fest festival and remember their names. Two of them are really good managers while being primarily tech based students.

My project was also same robotics.
 
Hopefully India will be first next time.
And the IIT team gets more funding.

List of winners.

1st place: California Institute of Technology: $6,000 (USA)
2nd place: Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay: $5,000 (INDIA)
3rd place: Cornell University: $2,000 (USA)
4th place: G.I. Nevelskoy Maritime State University: $1,500 (RUSSIA)
5th place: Kasetsart University & Chulalongkorn University: $1,500 (THAILAND)
6th place; Harbin Engineering University: $1,000 (CHINA)
7th place: McGill University: $1,000 (CANADA)
Wow
 
We have no dearth of talent but the initiative is missing...
 

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