Lidar tells distance, radar tells velocity, this new sensor does both

Enlarge /

A new startup aims to make lidars, like the two shown here, obsolete.


reader comments
1

Silicon Valley is crawling with startups looking for a piece of the emerging self-driving car business. One of those startups, Aeva, just came out of stealth mode with a big write-up in The New York Times. Its breakthrough: building a single sensor that can determine both the position and velocity of surrounding objects.

Most experts say that the best self-driving cars need a trifecta of sensors: cameras, lidar, and radar. They need all three sensor types because each performs a different function. Cameras can tell you what objects look like but not how far away they are or how fast they’re moving. Lidar measures distance, while radar provides a precise estimate of velocity.

According to the Times, Aeva’s sensor provides information about both position and velocity:

Where current lidar sensors send out individual pulses, Aeva’s device sends out a continuous wave of light. By reading the way this far more complex signal bounces off surrounding objects, Mr. Rezk said, the device can capture a far more detailed image while also tracking velocity. You can think of it as a cross between lidar, which is so good at measuring depth, and radar, which is so good at measuring speed.

Mr. Rezk also said the device’s continuous wave would provide greater range and resolution than existing lidar devices, deal better with weather and highly reflective objects like bridge railings, and avoid interference with other optical sensors.

The company is less than a year old, and, until today, it was in stealth mode—its website doesn’t yet have any details on the technology. So we’ll have to wait and see if the company’s claims are borne out by independent analysis. But if the new sensor works as advertised, it could make self-driving cars more reliable and affordable.

from Ars Technica http://ift.tt/2xpO02E
via IFTTT

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.