Search and Rescue: Squad Leader Musters Robots to US Disaster Zones

The next time a hurricane

Alpha geek Robin Murphy *
Photo: Jeff Wilson * The next time a hurricane slams the US, look for Robin Murphy and her army of machines. Murphy heads the Center for Robot-Assisted Search and Rescue, where she commands an arsenal of unmanned craft that specialize in emergency response.

Her team has been on call since 9/11; the hero bots' first mission was to comb through the rubble at the World Trade Center. "With the smoke and purple sky from the portable lights, it was like the opening sequence of The Terminator," Murphy recalls. Since then, the remotely controlled scouts have been deployed to mud slides, caved-in mines, and collapsed buildings around the world.

This summer, Murphy is prepping her unit for storm season at Texas A&M's Disaster City, a 52-acre gauntlet of wreckage used for preparedness training. She is also testing Survivor Buddy, a Microsoft-backed project designed to soothe trapped victims by supplying water and a live A/V feed to loved ones. "It's a presence right there with you," Murphy says. And it absolutely will not stop ... until you are comforted.

The Search and Rescue Crew

Sea-RAI zips across water to inspect damaged bridges and ferry aerial bots for launch.

Inuktun Extreme eats through difficult terrain to deliver two-way audio to survivors.

iSensys hovers over collapsed structures to scout for damage and blocked routes.

Caterpillar wriggles through rubble with a camera on its head to find live victims.

Robot illustrations: Brown Bird Design

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