DARPA Grand Challenge (2004)
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Announced in 2002, the first
DARPA Grand Challenge The DARPA Grand Challenge is a prize competition for American vehicle automation, autonomous vehicles, funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the most prominent research organization of the United States Department of Defense. Uni ...
was a
driverless car A self-driving car, also known as an autonomous car (AC), driverless car, robotic car or robo-car, is a car that is capable of operating with reduced or no User input, human input. They are sometimes called robotaxi, robotaxis, though this te ...
competition held on March 13, 2004 in the
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region of the
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. The route followed
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from right before
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to just past the
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-
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border in Primm. None of the robot vehicles finished the route. The vehicle of
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's Red Team traveled the furthest distance, completing of the course. The $1 million prize remained unclaimed.


Preliminary tests

Prior to the main event in the
Mojave Desert The Mojave Desert (; ; ) is a desert in the rain shadow of the southern Sierra Nevada mountains and Transverse Ranges in the Southwestern United States. Named for the Indigenous peoples of the Americas, indigenous Mohave people, it is located pr ...
, the twenty-one qualifying teams were required to navigate a mile-long obstacle course at
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. Seven teams were able to successfully finish the entire course, while eight others completed enough of it to satisfy the judges, resulting in fifteen vehicles making it to the final race."The robots were put through obstacle and speed tests to make sure they would be safe. While only seven teams completed the speedway course, eight others came close enough to convince judges that they could safely compete."


The event

Unfortunately, the failures during the preliminary tests were indicative of how the vehicles would perform on the actual course. Two of the fifteen vehicles had to be withdrawn before the final race began. Another vehicle also had to be withdrawn because it flipped upside down in the starting area. Three hours into the event which was scheduled to last ten hours, only four vehicles remained operational. The vehicles suffered from a variety of mechanical problems, including "stuck brakes, broken axles, rollovers, and malfunctioning satellite navigation equipment." Within a few hours, all of the vehicles in the challenge had suffered critical failures, had been disqualified, or had withdrawn. The furthest any of the teams got was the Red Team's , less than 5% off the full length of the course. Their vehicle,
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, went off-course in a hairpin turn and got stuck on the embankment. The next furthest vehicles were those of the SciAutonics II Team, which traversed before becoming stuck on an embankment; Team DAD (Digital Auto Drive), which drove before getting stuck on a rock; and the Golem Group, which made it before becoming trapped on a steep hill.


The results

Although the initial race was deemed a failure, as no vehicles achieved anything close to the goal, DARPA was committed to running the challenge for as long as Congressional authority allowed (which would have been until 2007, but the goal was reached in 2005). The first Grand Challenge is considered by some to be a success, mainly because it spurred interest and innovation. In addition to the difficulty most vehicles had with the harsh terrain, many initial designs also struggled to handle both sensing upcoming obstacles and following the GPS waypoints simultaneously. DARPA Grand Challenge deputy program manager Tom Strat said, "some of the vehicles were able to follow the GPS waypoints very accurately; but were not able to sense obstacles ahead....Other vehicles were very good at sensing obstacles, but had difficulty following waypoints or were scared of their own shadow, hallucinating obstacles when they weren't there." Several teams returned the next year, learning from the 2004 event and updating their designs. Alumni of the 2004 DARPA Grand Challenge include
Kyle Vogt Kyle Vogt (born ) is an American technology entrepreneur known for his contributions to autonomous vehicle technology and live-streaming platform technologies. Vogt is a co-founder of Cruise Automation, a developer of self-driving car technolog ...
, co-founder of self-driving car company Cruise.


References


External links


Official sites


The home page of the 2004 DARPA Grand Challenge


TV & Video coverage


NOVA: The Great Robot Race


Press Coverage



* ttps://www.theregister.co.uk/content/28/36234.html The Register: DARPA's Grand Challenge proves to be too grand
CNN.com: Robots fail to complete Grand Challenge

SFGate.com: Robot race suffers quick, ignoble end

2004 DARPA Grand Challenge Image Gallery

2004 DARPA Grand Challenge in Spanish

Journal of Field Robotics, Special Issue on DARPA Grand Challenge, Part 1

Journal of Field Robotics, Special Issue on DARPA Grand Challenge, Part 2





Scientific American article on the DARPA Grand Challenge

NOVA: The Great Robot Race


Team Sites

{{DEFAULTSORT:Darpa Grand Challenge (2004) Autonomous Auto Racing