UTA Student Team Scores Big Again in National AUV Competition

AUV Team Rolando Castilleja, Amen Omoragbon, Eric Pianori, Dr. Atilla Dogan, Dr. Arthur Alexander Reyes, and James Gilligan

A team of engineering students from the University of Texas at Arlington won third place in the 2006 national AUVSI Student Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Competition. A UTA team won first place in the national student competition last year. Department of Computer Science and Engineering faculty member Dr. Arthur Reyes, a co-director of UTA's Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Laboratory and a team advisor for the competition, praised the team for their hard work and high skills that led to their success.

The competition was held at the Patuxent River Naval Air Test Center in Maryland and was sponsored by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International and the U. S. Navy Program Executive Office for Strike Weapons and Unmanned Aviation.

Dr. Arthur Reyes Dr. Arthur Reyes
In addition to winning third place in the 2006 overall competition, the UTA team also won third place in mission performance and fifth place in oral presentation. Teams from the University of Manitoba and Brigham Young University won first and second place in the competition, which draws teams from America's top engineering schools, including MIT, Cornell and others.

Students on the team were mechanical and aerospace students junior Venko Damianov, degreed undergraduate Eric Pianori, junior Amen Omoragbon, senior Rolando Castilleja, senior James Gilligan and senior Ryan Slater.

Other advisors included CSE Faculty Associate Dr. Michael Youngblood, Industrial & Manufacturing Systems Engineering Associate Professor Brian Huff, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering assistant professors Atilla Dogan and Kamesh Subbarao.

The students and faculty advisors are members of the Autonomous Vehicles Laboratory and were supported by Bell Helicopter Textron, the College of Engineering, MicroPilot Inc., Dennis Lee Johnston, Multiplex Inc., Jay Francis, and the Fort Worth Thunderbirds Radio Control Club.