Mobile robot by EPFL
A Khepera III robot at the Georgia Institute of Technology
The first generation Khepera robot released in 1996
The Khepera is a small (5.5 cm) differential wheeled mobile robot that was developed at the LAMI laboratory of Professor Jean-Daniel Nicoud at EPFL (Lausanne , Switzerland) in the mid 1990s. It was developed by Edo. Franzi, Francesco Mondada , André Guignard and others.
Small, fast, and architectured around a Motorola 68331, it has served researchers for 10 years, widely used by over 500 universities[citation needed ] worldwide.
Scientific impact
The Khepera was sold to a thousand research labs and featured on the cover of the 31 August 2000 issue of Nature .[ 1] [full citation needed ] It appeared again in a 2003 article.[ 2]
The Khepera helped in the emergence of evolutionary robotics .[citation needed ]
Technical details
Original version
2.0 Version
Motorola 68331 CPU @ 25 MHz
512 KB RAM
512 KB Flash
Improved batteries and sensors
3.0 Version
800 MHz ARM Cortex-A8 Processor
Weight: 540g
256 MB RAM
512 MB plus additional 8GB for data
Battery: 7.4V Lithium Polymer, 3400mAh
Extensions
Several extension turrets exist for the Khepera, including:
Gripper
1D or 2D camera, wire or wireless
Radio emitter/receiver, low and high speed
I/0
See also
Webots – software that simulates and allows cross-compilation and remote control of the Khepera and other robots
References
Notes
External links
Homepage – K-Team, the company which sells the Khepera robots