 ‘It won’t look very much like a ferret,’ explains research leader, Dr Tony Dodd from the Department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering, ‘but it’s a ferret in that it ferrets around the container. Our first idea is a robot with magnetic wheels, because normally there’s a small space above the cargo container. It will drive along the ceiling upside down, searching around, and its sensors can detect the presence of different types of contraband.’ Currently he explains, methods used by police include dogs to sniff out drugs, or probes for carbon dioxide to detect people, or radar-type machines to look through containers. Dogs need to be trained, often only detect one type of drug, and can only work in quite short shifts, ‘we hope to be able to detect a number of different things with a single robot,’ says Dodd.
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