November 2, 2007
DARPA Announces Urban Challenge Finalists 11 Teams to Compete for Cash Prizes in Final Event of Robotic Ground
Vehicle Competition
Victorville, Calif. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) today announced that 11 teams have been selected as finalists to
compete in the DARPA Urban Challenge Event on November 3 at the former
George Air Force Base in Victorville, Calif. The finalists (list
attached) were selected from a field of 35 semi-finalists that
participated in the National Qualification Event (NQE) October 26-31, and
will compete for cash prizes worth $2 million for first, $1 million for
second, and $500,000 for third place.
"The teams that competed in the NQE were subjected to a series of
rigorous tests to determine whether they were equipped to compete in the
Urban Challenge Final Event," said DARPA Director Dr. Tony Tether.
"Finalists were selected based on performance in the NQE tests as
measured by data collected and evaluated by trained scorers in the testing
areas. The NQE tested the vehicles capability to merge into traffic,
navigate four-way intersections, respond to blocked roads, pass on-coming
cars on narrow roads, and keeping up with traffic on two- and four-lane
roads. In fact, the only major difference between the NQE and the Final
Event is that other robotic vehicles will be part of the traffic in the
Final Event."
Teams competing in the Urban Challenge Event attempt to complete a complex
60-mile urban course with live traffic in less than six hours. The
finalists will operate on the course roads with approximately 50
human-driven traffic vehicles. Speed is not the only factor in
determining the winners, as vehicles must also meet the same standards
required to pass the California DMV road test.
From the time each robotic vehicle leaves its starting chute and begins
the course, it is entirely under control of its onboard mission computer
human observers may intervene only for purposes of safety. The entire
field of robotic vehicles will be on the course at the same time,
interacting with one another as vehicles in urban areas across America do
each day. The vehicles will face driving challenges that include traffic
circles, merges, four-way intersections, blocked roads, parking, passing
slower moving vehicles, and merging safely with traffic on two- and four-lane roads.
"Vehicles competing in the Urban Challenge will have to think like human
drivers and continually make split-second decisions to avoid moving
vehicles, including robotic vehicles without drivers, and operate safely
on the course," added Urban Challenge Program Manager Dr. Norman
Whitaker. "The urban setting adds considerable complexity to the
challenge faced by the robotic vehicles, and replicates the environments
where many of today's military missions are conducted."
The Urban Challenge Event is open to spectators, and is expected to
attract thousands of attendees and hundreds of media from all over the
world. The competition's course and spectator areas at the former
George Air Force Base are located at 18374 Phantom in Victorville, Calif.
Grounds will be open to spectators starting at 6:00 AM PDT, and after an
opening ceremony at 7:30 AM PDT, vehicles will begin to launch at 8:00 AM PDT.
Robotics enthusiasts who are unable to make it to Victorville can get a
first-hand look at the action in a professionally hosted webcast starting
at 7:30 AM PDT / 10:30 AM EDT that will feature views of the competition
from a variety of camera positions. The webcast will be accessible via
two event websites www.darpa.mil/grandchallenge and www.grandchallenge.org
that also will have regularly updated news,
pictures and other content on the competition. Television stations can
downlink a satellite feed with same day coverage of the competition on
Saturday, November 3, 1:00-1:30 PM PDT / 4:00-4:30 PM EDT, Galaxy 17 KU, transponder 4, uplink frequency 14080-H, downlink frequency 11780-V.
Qualification Breakdown
Qualified
Ben Franklin Racing Team, Philadelphia, PA
CarOLO, Caroline, NY
Honeywell/Intelligent Vehicle Solutions, Troy, MI
MIT, Cambridge, MA
Stanford Racing Team, Stanford, CA
Tartan Racing, Pittsburgh, PA
Team Cornell, Ithaca, NY
Victor Tango, Blacksburg, VA
Team AnnieWay, Palo Alto, CA
Team Oshkosh Truck, Oshkosh, WI
Team UCF, Orlando, FL
Did Not Qualify
Austin Robot Technology, Austin, TX
AvantGuardium, Fort Worth, TX
Axion Racing, Westlake Village, CA
Gator Nation, Gainesville, FL
Georgia Tech/SAIC Sting Racing, Atlanta, GA
Insight Racing, Cary, NC
Mojavaton, Grand Junction, CO
Ody-Era, Kokomo, IN
Princeton, Princeton, NJ
SciAutonics/Auburn Engineering, Thousand Oaks, CA
Team Berlin, Houston, TX
OSU-ACT, Columbus, OH
Team Autonomous Solutions, Petersboro, UT
Team CajunBot, Lafayette, LA
Team CalTech, Pasadena, CA
Team Case, Cleveland, OH
Team Cybernet, Ann Arbor, MI
Team Gray, Metairie, LA
Team Jefferson, Crozet, VA
Team Juggernaut, Sandy, UT
Team Urbanator, Littleton, CO
Team-LUX, Woodstock, MD
The Golem Group, Santa Monica, CA
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT
ABOUT DARPA
DARPA is the central research and development organization for the
Department of Defense (DoD). The Agency manages and directs basic and
applied research and development projects for DoD and pursues research and
technology that provide dramatic advances in support of military missions.
ABOUT THE DARPA GRAND CHALLENGE
DARPA has sponsored two previous autonomous robotic ground vehicle
competitions that were known as the DARPA Grand Challenge. The 2004
competition featured 15 vehicles attempting to complete a 142-mile desert
course for a $1 million cash prize, but none of the vehicles finished. In
the 2005 Grand Challenge, four autonomous vehicles successfully completed
a 132-mile desert route under the required 10-hour limit, and DARPA
awarded a $2 million prize to "Stanley" from Stanford University.
Contact:
Don Shipley: 571.212.7492 (cell)
Justin Celko: 517.974.5529 (cell)
Jan Walker: 703.509.7506 (cell)