Red Whittaker
Dr. William L. "Red" Whittaker | |
---|---|
Born | 1948 |
Alma mater | Princeton University Carnegie Mellon University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Robotics, Driverless Cars, Planetary Rovers, Automated Agriculture, Automated mining |
Institutions | Carnegie Mellon University, Astrobotic Technology |
Red Whittaker (born 1948) is a roboticist and research professor of robotics at Carnegie Mellon University. He led Tartan Racing to its first-place victory in the DARPA Grand Challenge (2007) Urban Challenge [1] and brought Carnegie Mellon University the two million dollar prize. Previously, Whittaker also competed for the DARPA Grand Challenge placing second and third place simultaneously, in the Grand Challenge Races.
Whittaker is currently the Fredkin Research Professor at Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute as well as the Director of the Field Robotics Center and Chief Scientist of the Robotics Engineering Consortium, both located at the university.
Red founded and led Carnegie Mellon University's team in the Google Lunar X Prize.[2] from its inception in 2007 until its ultimate closure in 2018. Today Whittaker continues this work through NASA contracts in the form of MoonRanger, a planetary rover in development being designed to quickly and autonomously explore the surface of the Moon.[3] As the chairman and CSO of Astrobotic Technology, Whittaker will play an instrumental role in further lunar development.[4]
Biography
Whittaker spent his childhood in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, where his father was a salesman for explosives and his mother was a chemist.[5] He matriculated at Princeton University, but interrupted his studies to join the United States Marines.[5] He returned to Princeton to earn his bachelor's degree in civil engineering in 1973 and then attended Carnegie Mellon University, where he earned his master's degree in 1975 and his Ph.D. in 1979, both in civil engineering.
Robotics
In March of the year he received his Ph.D., the nuclear reactor at nearby Three Mile Island nearly experienced a meltdown.[6] Within a budget of $1.5 million, Whittaker and his colleagues at Carnegie Mellon built robots to inspect and perform repairs in the reactor's damaged basement,[7] and their experiences with that project resulted in the creation of the Field Robotics Center at Carnegie Mellon University.[7] Whittaker's later teams would also develop robots to help with the aftermath of the nuclear reactor accident at Chernobyl in 1986.[8] In 1987, Whittaker co-founded RedZone Robotics to develop and sell (or lease) robots that could operate in hazardous environments and situations too dangerous for humans.
Whittaker has led teams that have created robots designed to search for fallen meteorites in the ice fields of Antarctica,[9][10] climb into the craters of active volcanoes in Alaska[11][12] and Antarctica,[13] and explore the terrain of Mars.[14] The accident at the Quecreek Coal Mine in nearby Somerset County, Pennsylvania compelled Whittaker and his colleague Scott Thayer to develop robots that could map collapsed or abandoned mines[15] for accident prevention or rescue purposes; they were joined in this endeavor by CMU colleague Sebastian Thrun. Whittaker's robots have also explored the Atacama Desert.
DARPA Grand Challenge
Whittaker has led teams at Carnegie Mellon to build self-driving cars that have participated in the DARPA Grand Challenge since the inception of the contest. In the first competition held in 2004, his Red Team's vehicle "Sandstorm" traveled 7.4 miles, the farthest of any participant, but no prize was awarded to any team. In the second competition in 2005, Whittaker led two teams, whose vehicles "Sandstorm" and "H1ghlander" captured 2nd place and 3rd place, respectively, behind the vehicle of his colleague, former Carnegie Mellon professor Sebastian Thrun. (Thrun's software development leader, Michael Montemerlo, was also a former student of Whittaker.)
In the third competition held in 2007, Whittaker's team "Tartan Racing" captured first place with their vehicle "Boss", winning the $2 million prize.[16]
Professional activities
- Fellow, American Association for Artificial Intelligence
- Member, National Research Council, Commission on Engineering and Technical Systems, Committee on Advanced Space Technologies
- Member, American Nuclear Society; Robotics and Remote Systems Division
- Member, National Academy of Sciences Peer Review Committee on DOE Environmental Management Technologies, 1994–1995.
- Member, National Academy of Sciences Committee to Provide Interim Oversight of the DOE Nuclear Weapons Complex, 1988–1989.
Awards and honors
- IEEE Simon Ramo Medal, 2012
- ASCE Columbia Medal, 2012
- Inaugural AAAI Feigenbaum Prize, 2011
- Elected to National Academy of Engineering, 2009
- Named University Professor, the highest faculty rank at Carnegie Mellon University, 2007
- Design News Special Achievement Award, 1998
- Vector/Pittsburgh, Man of the Year in Technology for 1994
- Laurels Award, Aviation Week and Space Technology for outstanding achievement, 1994
- American Association of Artificial Intelligence, AAAI Fellow, 1993
- Carnegie Mellon University Alumni Merit Award for Outstanding Achievement, 1992
- Computerworld, Smithsonian Award 1992
- Science Digest's Top 100 US Innovators for robotics work, 1987
- Teare Award for Teaching Excellence, Carnegie Mellon University
- National Science Foundation Fellowship, Carnegie Mellon University
- CIT Fellowship, Carnegie Mellon University
See also
- Sandstorm, one of Red Team's autonomous vehicles
References
- ^ Byron Spice (2007-11-04). "Carnegie Mellon Tartan Racing Wins $2 Million DARPA Urban Challenge". Carnegie Mellon University.
- ^ Alicia Chang (2007-09-14). "Google to Finance Moon Challenge Contest". The Washington Post.
- ^ Byron Spice. "NASA Selects Carnegie Mellon, Astrobotic to Develop Lunar Robot". Carnegie Mellon University.
- ^ Astrobotic Technology, Inc. - About
- ^ a b Michael Arndt (2006-06-26). ""Red" Whittaker: A Man And His Robots". BusinessWeek.
- ^ "Fact Sheet on the Three Mile Island Accident". Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 2007-02-20.
- ^ a b John Markoff (1991-04-21). "The Creature That Lives in Pittsburgh". The New York Times.
- ^ Vincent Kiernan (1998-07-17). "Getting an Inside Look at the Chernobyl Reactor". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
- ^ Warren E. Leary (1997-05-13). "Hardier Breed of Antarctic and Lunar Explorers: Robots". The New York Times.
- ^ Warren E. Leary (2000-01-18). "Hunt for Meteorites In Antarctica Enlists a Novel Recruit". The New York Times.
- ^ Warren E. Leary (1994-08-02). "Robot Is Nearing Goal Inside Active Volcano". The New York Times.
- ^ Warren E. Leary (1994-08-03). "Robot Completes Volcano Exploration". The New York Times.
- ^ Warren E. Leary (1992-12-08). "Robot Named Dante To Explore Inferno Of Antarctic Volcano". The New York Times.
- ^ Edmund L. Andrews (1991-04-13). "Patents; 'Daddy-Longlegs' Robot for Exploration of Mars". The New York Times.
- ^ Byron Spice (2002-10-29). "CMU tries out new mine-mapping robot". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- ^ Byron Spice (2007-11-04). "Carnegie Mellon Tartan Racing Wins $2 Million DARPA Urban Challenge". Carnegie Mellon University.
External links
- Personal site
- Academic site
- About RedZone Robotics
- Red Team Racing
- Nova |The Great Robot Race (Red Whittaker is prominently featured in this television documentary.)
- Princeton University School of Engineering and Applied Science alumni
- Carnegie Mellon University faculty
- Carnegie Mellon University College of Engineering alumni
- American roboticists
- United States Marines
- Fellows of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence
- Living people
- DARPA Grand Challenge
- Members of the United States National Academy of Engineering