3 resultados para Flying wings, Arduino, FlightGear, Simulink, UAV, Drone
em Universidad de Alicante
Resumo:
En los últimos años las plataformas de hardware libre han adquirido gran relevancia en el desarrollo de prototipos y en la educación en tecnología. Una plataforma de hardware libre es básicamente un diseño de sistema un electrónico microprocesador que sus autores difunden libremente y puede ser utilizado sin tener que pagar licencias. Ente la multitud de plataformas disponibles, destaca Arduino. Se caracteriza por su bajo precio, y que el software necesario para hacer funcionar la plataforma es libre y gratuito. Todo ello hace que estos dispositivos sean fácilmente accesibles por estudiantes. Este trabajo describe la aplicación de hardware libre a experimentos de laboratorio en asignaturas de ingeniería de la UA, especialmente del máster en Automática y Robótica, en las que se controlan sistemas industriales o robóticos. Esto contrasta con los experimentos clásicos en los que se emplean sistemas caros y difícilmente accesibles por el alumno. Además, los experimentos deben ser atractivos y de aplicaciones reales, para atraer el interés del alumno, con el objetivo principal de que aprenda más y mejor en el laboratorio.
Resumo:
The free hardware platforms have become very important in engineering education in recent years. Among these platforms, Arduino highlights, characterized by its versatility, popularity and low price. This paper describes the implementation of four laboratory experiments for Automatic Control and Robotics courses at the University of Alicante, which have been developed based on Arduino and other existing equipment. Results were evaluated taking into account the views of students, concluding that the proposed experiments have been attractive to them, and they have acquired the knowledge about hardware configuration and programming that was intended.
Resumo:
The commercial data acquisition systems used for seismic exploration are usually expensive equipment. In this work, a low cost data acquisition system (Geophonino) has been developed for recording seismic signals from a vertical geophone. The signal goes first through an instrumentation amplifier, INA155, which is suitable for low amplitude signals like the seismic noise, and an anti-aliasing filter based on the MAX7404 switched-capacitor filter. After that, the amplified and filtered signal is digitized and processed by Arduino Due and registered in an SD memory card. Geophonino is configured for continuous registering, where the sampling frequency, the amplitude gain and the registering time are user-defined. The complete prototype is an open source and open hardware system. It has been tested by comparing the registered signals with the ones obtained through different commercial data recording systems and different kind of geophones. The obtained results show good correlation between the tested measurements, presenting Geophonino as a low-cost alternative system for seismic data recording.