The Laser That's Changing the World: The Amazing Stories behind Lidar, from 3D Mapping to Self-Driving Cars

The Laser That's Changing the World: The Amazing Stories behind Lidar, from 3D Mapping to Self-Driving Cars

by Todd Neff
The Laser That's Changing the World: The Amazing Stories behind Lidar, from 3D Mapping to Self-Driving Cars

The Laser That's Changing the World: The Amazing Stories behind Lidar, from 3D Mapping to Self-Driving Cars

by Todd Neff

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Overview

Tells the story of a laser technology that will have a big impact on society and the brilliant innovators responsible for its developmentLidar--a technology evolved from radar, but using laser light rather than microwaves--has found an astounding range of applications, none more prominent than its crucial role in enabling self-driving cars. This accessible introduction to a fascinating and increasingly vital technology focuses on the engaging human stories of lidar's innovators as they advance and adapt it to better understand air, water, ice and Earth - not to mention mapping Mars and Mercury, spotting incoming nuclear warheads, and avoiding pedestrians and cyclists on city streets.Award-winning science writer Todd Neff invites readers behind the scenes to meet some of the great innovators who have explored and expanded the uses of this amazing technology: people like MIT scientist Louis Smullin, whose lidar bounced light off the moon soon after the laser's invention; Allan Carswell, who plumbed the shallows of Lake Erie en route to developing the aerial lidar now essential for coastal mapping and hurricane damage assessment; Red Whittaker, the field robotics pioneer who was putting lidar on his autonomous contraptions as early as the 1980s; and David Hall, whose laser sombrero on a Toyota Tundra gave birth to modern automotive lidar.These are just some of the stories Neff tells before looking ahead to a future that could bring lidar to unpiloted air taxis, to the contaminated pipes of the U.S. nuclear weapons complex, and to satellites capable of pinpointing greenhouse gas sources from orbit. As the author makes clear, the sky is no limit with lidar, which promises to make our world safer, healthier, and vastly more interesting.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781633884670
Publisher: Prometheus Books
Publication date: 10/09/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 314
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Todd Neff is an award-winning science, environment, and healthcare journalist. Previously, he was science and environment reporter for the Boulder Daily Camera and a 2007-2008 Ted Scripps Fellow in Environmental Journalism. His work has appeared in Smithsonian Air & Space, Business 2.0, Mashable, and Compliance Week, among other publications. He is the author of From Jars to the Stars, which won the Colorado Book Award for history in 2012.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1

Flat-screen monitors display pointillist renderings of mountains, rivers, roads, bridges, buildings, and power lines with little regard for the usual relationships between actual pigmentation and color. In place of those are schemes generally favoring deep blues at the base that then loosen into greens, yellows, oranges, and reds with increasing elevation. There are enough screens with enough color that one has the sense of being courted by many amorous peacocks. The screens belong to exhibit hall booths, which, for the duration of the 2017 International Lidar Mapping Forum at the Hyatt Regency Denver, belong to dozens of data providers, point cloud software developers, and makers of very pricey laser and other hardware. Many have sci-fi names: Quantum Spatial, Network Geomatics, Terrasolid. Many have sci-fi products too, though they happen to be real.

Drones resembling paper airplanes, stealth fighters, helicopters, and propellered crabs have alighted on many tables and stands. I pause to consider the Pulse Aerospace Vapor 15, a black chopper with its rotors folded back like the wings of some immense cricket. If it were a carnivore, I would be lunch.

I just had lunch, standing over a ham and cheese sandwich from the buffet with a semiretired guy named Brad Weigle. He grows bananas and mangoes in his Florida backyard but won’t be there much over the next couple of years. He’s moving to Hawaii to map the National Tropical Botanical Gardens in high resolution using lidar that flies on drones like the Pulse Aerospace Vapor 15. As we talked, Chuyen Nguyen, a graduate student from Texas A&M–Corpus Christi whom Weigle had met earlier, stopped to say hi and somehow mistook me for someone capable of grokking something called multiscale voxel segmentation for terrestrial lidar data as pertains to swamp mapping, the subject of her PhD work. I smiled and nodded pleasantly and said things like “Wow” and “Amazing” at what seemed be appropriate intervals. When she moved on, Weigle assured me: “That stuff is cutting edge. It’s going to be a really big deal.”

Over at the Velodyne Lidar booth, a sales engineer named Jeff Wuendry tells me that self-driving vehicles that constantly lidar-scan their environments (so they, for example, don’t smash into things) could, if that data were crowdsourced and stored in the cloud, obviate the need for lidar mapping drones, at least in a lot of urban environments. Wuendry also tells me that he used to work for a German company called SICK, now a big name in lidar. It started out with light curtains so metal-stamping machines wouldn’t inadver-tently crush the hands of their minders, he says.

I walk the few steps over to the Harris Corporation booth, where Blake Burns, a senior sales engineer, explains that with one of Harris’s multimillion-dollar Geiger-mode flash lidar rigs, from an aircraft flying 330 miles an hour at an altitude of twenty-seven thousand feet, can render a three-mile swath of whatever lies below in photographic detail (rainbow coloration notwith-standing)—not to mention, he adds, three-dimensional exactitude to about four inches in any direction. The US military has been using similar Harris systems for two decades, he says, though this was only declassified a couple of years back. Just three of the civilian units exist, and they have better things to do than hang out in an exhibition hall.

Right next door, so to speak, Katie Fitzsimmons of Leica Geosystems tells me that Leica’s single-photon lidar—another multimillion-dollar black box, an example of which is on hand and, were it turned on, would be collecting breathtakingly detailed imagery and elevation data of the Hyatt carpet—operates like the equivalent of one hundred typical lidars at once, firing off six million laser pulses each second. The company is in the process of elevation mapping the continental United States and Western Europe to an accuracy of a foot or less with these machines, Fitzsimmons adds. She speaks with enthusiasm, but also more matter-of-factly than the situation seems to warrant, like someone reciting for the umpteenth time the technical specs of a space-time portal.

Her colleague Josh Rayburn describes the company’s Pegasus:Backpack, a twenty-eight-pound carbon-fiber-reinforced wonder with five cameras and two spinning Velodyne lidars so someone can walk around and capture detailed 3D renderings of indoor or outdoor spaces. It costs about as much as a Ferrari. It’s right about now that my brain starts to hurt.

It’s not only being overwhelmed by all the shiny objects, preening flat screens, and jargon; it’s also the weight of knowing that the lidar mapping that this entire conference is dedicated to represents just one of many realms in which people are using lidar. That knowledge both reinforces and seriously complicates my desire to make the technology and its evolution clear to people who, like me, might otherwise suspect a voxel to be a Toyota subcompact.

Lidar is a technology capable of measuring continental drift, determining the composition of Earth’s atmosphere, discovering lost cities, tracking the biomass in forests, assessing flood risk and hurricane damage, measuring the melting of glaciers, detecting submerged explosives and the level of the seas in which they lurk, listening to stinkbug conversations, guiding missiles and self-driving cars, and a whole lot more. I have become fascinated with this most striking macroscopic application of quantum physics, which, were it not for its milquetoast name, would surely have soaked up a lot more popular love by now, considering its growing importance to science, industry, and government. I have decided it’s time to tell lidar’s story, starting at the beginning and hanging tough until a sort of techno-Darwinian explosion sent the technology radiating into more niches than any reasonable tome might possibly hold. Then I will have to pick and choose.

The beginning is straightforward, though. The extraordinary technol-ogies arrayed at this technical conference in the Mile High City share an improbable common ancestor: lidar’s first flicker occurred between the ears of a self-educated, mentally troubled Irish savant who lived with his parents on the outskirts of Dublin and corresponded with Albert Einstein. He dreamed up ways to see the impossibly tiny and the impossibly distant, to be realized long after he was gone.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Hutchie 7

Chapter 2 Enter the Laser 22

Chapter 3 Into Thin Air 34

Chapter 4 Plane Crashes, Hailstorms, and Distant Planets 43

Chapter 5 Take the Plunge 60

Chapter 6 Disco Ball in Space 73

Chapter 7 Zapping Mars, Moon, Mercury, and Even Earth 85

Chapter 8 Land and Ice 94

Chapter 9 Trees and Archaeological Treasures 104

Chapter 10 Glass Half Full 122

Chapter 11 Firepond 134

Chapter 12 Map Quest 147

Chapter 13 Atoms to Bytes 162

Chapter 14 Hit the Road (Slowly) 181

Chapter 15 Debacle in the Desert 193

Chapter 16 The Road Ahead 205

Chapter 17 Glue, Drones, and Radioactive Pipes 217

Acknowledgments 235

Notes 237

Index 275

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