PHOTO: Kim Dong-Joo/AFP/Getty Images
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Go ahead, make its day.
A new gun-toting sentry robot, developed by Samsung
Techwin Co. for the South Korean government, may soon be
coming to a disputed border near you. The SGR-A1 robot
uses a low-light camera and pattern recognition
software to distinguish humans from animals or other
objects and, if necessary, can fire its built‑in machine
gun—a Daewoo K3.
Myung Ho Yoo, a principal research engineer at
Samsung’s Optics & Digital Imaging Division in
Seongnam City, just southeast of Seoul, says the robot
is the first of its kind to be commercialized. South
Korea’s need for such a robot is clear, he says. Unlike
the border between the United States and Mexico or even
those separating Israel from the occupied territories,
the demilitarized zone that stretches for 250 kilometers
between South and North Korea is patrolled along its
entire length. With one guard post every 50 meters along
the southern side, two guards per post, and twelve
shifts per day, the man-years spent on guard duty
quickly add up.
The Samsung robot packs a 5-millimeter, Korean-made
light machine gun. Should it detect an intruder, “the
ultimate decision about shooting should be made by a
human, not the robot,” says Yoo, who led the team that
designed the robot. But the robot does have an automatic
mode, in which it can make the decision.
The machine’s real innovation is its color camera,
which can pinpoint a target from up to 500 meters away
in illumination down to 0.008 lux (lumens per square
meter), about the same as a starlit night. The robot has
three such cameras, two of which work in stereo for
surveillance and tracking while the third zooms in for
targeting. A digital video recorder captures data for up
to 60 days at a time. By calling up the robot’s ID
number, operators back in Seoul can also see in real
time what is happening in the field.
For use in the DMZ, the sentry bot doesn’t need to
distinguish friend from foe. “When you cross the line,
you’re automatically an enemy,” Yoo says. He wouldn’t
say whether the robot has actually been deployed in the
DMZ but did note that units are currently being
assembled and tested at the company’s factory in
Changwon, near Pusan. Samsung is also looking to deploy
the robot—minus the gun, but perhaps with some sort of
nonlethal weapon—at airports, prisons, and nuclear power
plants, among other places. There’s no price tag as yet,
but Yoo estimates it will be in the US $80 000 to
$100 000 range.
By deploying the robots, Yoo thinks his government may
be able to significantly reduce the mandatory two years
of military service that all young Korean men now serve.
His own son is a freshman in college and will soon be
eligible for the army. “My son likes this robot,” he says.