Drones and Satellites: Identifying Interdisciplinary Capstone Projects with Other Departments at Your Own University

In our undergraduate program, students complete an interdisciplinary two-semester senior project capstone experience. The project is typically industry-sponsored, includes design and build phases, and results in a working prototype delivered to the sponsor. In recent years, enrollment in our program...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bruce E Dunne, Paul Keenlance
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ASEE Conferences 2018
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Online Access:http://peer.asee.org/30345
Description
Summary:In our undergraduate program, students complete an interdisciplinary two-semester senior project capstone experience. The project is typically industry-sponsored, includes design and build phases, and results in a working prototype delivered to the sponsor. In recent years, enrollment in our program has dramatically increased, requiring a doubling of the number of senior projects (and project sponsors). Identifying viable projects, while maintaining our standards in terms of challenging yet feasible designs, has become significantly more difficult as a large number of new sponsors are needed. To that end, we have been looking beyond our traditional industry partners to other sources for project sponsorship. Fortunately, recent collaboration with the Natural Resources Management (NRM) Department (an offshoot of the Biology Department) at our own university has proven to be a fruitful source of excellent interdisciplinary projects. It turns out that wildlife management is an area ripe for new technological advances with numerous applications. Many of the projects with the NRM group are based on the need to track and count populations of wildlife. In some projects, we assume that the wildlife is somehow tagged or collared while in other projects, we create the animal collar. For example, in one project, the animals (the American Marten) wear small collars with an RF transmitter that serves as a beacon. Traditionally, small aircraft with antennas mounted on the plane (or hand held) fly low in tight routes, scanning the ground. Instead, our students developed an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) drone that flies above the tree line and scans the surrounding area for a signal. This UAV employs a Software Defined Radio (SDR) system to directionally locate the animal while transmitting this information to the biologist on the ground. In another project, a student team developed an environmentally hardened animal collar that regularly takes and stores GPS location data over a long period of time, and uploads that information at pre-determined intervals to the researcher. Several additional versions of this collar are under development by other teams, including a version that uses the Iridium Satellite Constellation to remotely transmit animal GPS data directly to the researcher offsite. Other related projects currently under investigation include using passive Radio Frequency IDentification (RFID) tags and a detector to monitor turtle movements and developing a monitoring network that relays status to researchers at a lodge. All of these projects include excellent engineering challenges for students in electrical, computer, mechanical and product engineering. In this paper, we give a brief overview of our senior project model, and how these new projects fit. We then give some detail on the various project ideas and requirements, and how these projects challenge our student teams. Also, as is of course necessary with any development, we discuss methods and strategies for funding these project developments. Finally, we conclude with showcasing these systems in actual fieldwork, and discuss how they are benefiting the research of our NRM partners and sponsors. Comment: 15 pages