
New Robot Testing Terrorist Bomb Recipes
2012-11-12 00:48:05
Following a terrorist's recipe for blowing up a plane is a good way for
human bomb-makers who study these recipes to risk death themselves. But a
fearless new robot named "LEXI" can help the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security cook up potentially unstable explosive mixtures for the sake of
studying terrorist tactics.
LEXI works inside the "firing tanks" used for testing the power of homemade
explosives at the High Explosives Applications Facility of Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory in California. The robot's job is to take explosive
cocktails from a vibrating mixer and place them on a firing table to prepare for
detonation أ¢â‚¬â€ a task too dangerous for humans to handle.
"We need to see what a terrorist might use and how effective certain types of
explosives might be in bringing down planes and other targets of interest," said
Lee Glascoe, an engineer at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
The robot hides behind a blast shield as an acoustic mixer vibrates to
mix bomb ingredients into an explosive mixture. LEXI only comes out into the
open to move the bomb mixture to the firing table before rolling out the firing
tank's door to escape the blast zone prior to detonation.
Such robotic precautions have enabled the National Explosives Engineering
Sciences Security (NEXESS) Center أ¢â‚¬â€ a program is funded by the Department of
Homeland Security أ¢â‚¬â€ to test the explosive power of possible bomb mixtures used
by terrorists.
"There are a lot of materials that we look at, and many are safe to work with in
contact, such as with your hands, if you know what you are doing," Glascoe
explained. "But there are many that are not; particularly if they have certain
additives like sulfur or aluminum."
LEXI represents a modified iRobot Packbot 510 أ¢â‚¬â€ a battle-tested robot made by
the company that also produces Roomba vacuum cleaners. But LEXI's unique job of
assisting bomb-making stands out compared with its fellow iRobots that usually
help U.S. soldiers disable roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Before LEXI, we weren't able to look at some of these explosives because of
safety concerns," Glascoe said.
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