Palestra – 07/11/2016 – 10:15-11:45 – Sala A302

31/10/2016 14:51
Palestrante: Asgeir Johan Sørensen
http://www.ntnu.edu/employees/asgeir.sorensen
Título: NTNU AMOS – Centre for Autonomous Marine Operations and Systems
Resumo: The Departments of Marine Technology and Engineering Cybernetics at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) together with leading international research partners and Norwegian companies approved the AMOS project. Researchers at NTNU AMOS are working together to create a world-leading center for autonomous marine operations and control systems. NTNU AMOS will contribute with fundamental and interdisciplinary knowledge in marine hydrodynamics, ocean constructions and control theory. The research results will be used to develop intelligent ships and ocean structures, autonomous unmanned vehicles (under water, on the surface and in air) and robots for high-precision and safety-critical operations in extreme environments. This is necessary in order to meet challenges related to environmental and climate, safe maritime transport, mapping and surveillance of large ocean and coastal regions, offshore renewable energy, fisheries and aquaculture as well as deep-sea and Arctic oil and gas exploration. The AMOS research team includes experts in engineering cybernetics, control systems, marine biology, marine archeology, electrical engineering, telecommunication and underwater technology. This presentation will provide a general overview of the AMOS project and also about the Marine Cybernetics specialisation. The Marine Cybernetics combines theoretical and practical understanding of the discipline control engineering, focusing on how other relevant disciplines may be mathematically modelled. Graduates are thus able to develop advanced, automated regulating and monitoring systems for a number of different purposes in offshore operations, ships engineering, and the aquaculture industry. https://www.ntnu.edu/studies/mtmart/marine-cybernetics http://www.ntnu.edu/amos
Data: 07/11/2016
Local: Sala A302
Horário: 10:15 – 11:45