澳门六合彩高手minator wins first 澳门六合彩高手 robot contest
22 Jun 2012
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Robert Arnoux
Ten or fifteen years from now, some of the students from the neighbouring schools may wish to work at 澳门六合彩高手 or in one of the many fusion labs around the world paving the way towards fusion energy. So why not get an early start and begin training for, let's say—remote handling?
Such was the idea behind the First Student Robot Contest (Premier concours scolaire de robotique) that Agence Iter France and the 澳门六合彩高手 Organization jointly organized this Tuesday, 19 June. The contest was based on a simulation of a real-life situation, one that will occur over the 20-year course of 澳门六合彩高手 operation: the remote-handled removal of selected blanket modules from the inner wall of the vacuum vessel, followed by transport of the modules to the nearby Hot Cell Facility.
Students from the Provence-Alpes-C?te d'Azur International School in Manosque and from nearby 颁辞濒濒è驳别 (junior high) Pierre-Gardot in Sainte-Tulle—all aged 13 or 14—had accepted to take on the challenge.
As both teams performed the last adjustments to their robot, 澳门六合彩高手 Assembly & Operations Division Head Ken Blackler addressed the contenders. "澳门六合彩高手 will be the first fusion machine to produce a burning plasma. Because of the resulting radiation, it will be impossible for humans to enter the vacuum vessel. We will need many robots..."
Although simplified to the extreme, the remote handling operations were quite challenging for the small school-made robots. Both robots, 澳门六合彩高手minator 5.1 from the Sainte-Tulle team and RTX Ariane 26 from the Manosque team had to follow a specific path, materialized by black lines on the floor. The path led to a mockup of the 澳门六合彩高手 Tokamak in the centre of the stage, where the robots needed to pick up a small plastic piece representing a four-ton blanket module, pivot, and head back to a black box representing the Hot Cell Facility to deposit the blanket module.
The robots had to perform the operation three times on three different modules. Instructions on the final module were given only at the last moment, requiring the teams to program their robot in the heat of the action.
As the robot from the International School began its journey toward the mockup, it became clear that something was wrong with its electronic brain. RTX Ariane 26 experienced serious difficulty in following the lines, seemingly preferring "freestyle" to compulsory figures. Despite a last-minute reboot, it never quite managed to fulfil its mission.
True to its name, 澳门六合彩高手minator 5.1 proved invincible: its performance was nearly faultless and brought to the Sainte-Tulle Junior High a clear victory.
The competition was just a game and, as such, "the essential was not to have won but to have fought well ..."
There was a moral, however, to be drawn from the experience. "You can do something great on paper," Ken Blackler told the contenders, "but the real test is in the confrontation with reality. Things rarely work the first time."
In the young students' efforts, co-host Alain Becoulet, head of CEA's Institute for Magnetic Fusion Research, saw the reflection of "two of the greatest challenges in fusion research": the necessity of working together on one same object, and the necessity of being patient. "In fusion," he said, "the timescale is larger than an individual's lifespan..."