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A reconnaissance robot is an automated device that is operated by an operator and designed to acquire data by spotting specific obstacles using cameras, sensors, and images that can be examined by the operator.
UGV sensors are primarily used for navigation and environment detection. Compasses, odometers, inclinometers, gyroscopes, triangulation cameras, laser and ultrasound range finders, and infrared technologies are examples of sensors.
Robots and unmanned machines for military use are quickly gaining autonomy. They take the shape of autonomous vehicles, such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), which can operate autonomously thanks to artificial intelligence (AI) and environmental sensors.
Unmanned vehicles or uncrewed vehicles are those without occupants. Unmanned vehicles can be either telerobotically controlled (remotely controlled or remotely guided vehicles) or autonomously controlled (autonomous vehicles), which have the ability to sense their surroundings and navigate on their own.
Unmanned Surface Vehicles (USV) or Autonomous Surface Vehicles (ASV) are boats that operate without a crew on the surface of the sea. They can be managed by a user on land or aboard another ship because they are remotely operated.
Drones, also referred to as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), are used in a wide range of industries, including the military, construction, image and video mapping, medical, search and rescue, parcel delivery, hidden area exploration, oil rig and power line monitoring, precision farming, and wireless communication.
The Global Unmanned Reconnaissance Robot market accounted for $XX Billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2023 to 2030.
As part of the EU’s fourth iMUGS project demonstration, Milrem Robotics, an Estonian producer of robotic vehicles, unveiled the THeMIS Observe, an autonomous Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) unmanned ground system.
The THeMIS Observe is an ISR-integrated UGV built on the THeMIS UGV platform from Milrem Robotics. The ROSY (Rapid Obscuring System) by Rheinmetall, the Metravib Defense Pearl acoustic shot detection, the Squire radar by Thales, the Z:Sparrowhawk camera from HENSOLDT, and a mast from the Teksam Company NV are all components of the system. It can also have a light remote weapon station installed.
By combining these technologies, units may do multi-sensor identification on a single platform and respond more quickly to new targets.
The camera from HENSOLDT, the Squire radar from Thales, the Metravib Defence Pearl acoustic shot detection, and the ROSY (Rapid Obscuring System) from Rheinmetall are just a few of the ISR tools integrated into the THeMIS Observe. Another component of the system is a light remote weapon station.