COSMOS magazine

Get COSMOS Teacher's Notes

News

Awards recognise research of major benefit to society

Thursday, 21 May 2009
Cosmos Online

Single page print view

Cuttlefish counting robot

One of Durrant-Whyte's autonomous robots, which is used for counting cuttlefish on the ocean floor.

Credit: Hugh Durrant-Whyte

Hugh Durrant-Whyte

Hugh Durrant-Whyte, an engineer at the University of Sydney, won one of the awards for his critical role in raising the profile of Australian robotics.

Credit: ATSE

 John Hopwood

John Hopwood, a molecular geneticist with the Children, Youth and Women's Health Service in Adelaide, South Australia, has developed drugs for two well known lysosomal diseases - Hunter's Syndrome and Maroteaux-Lamy Syndrome.

Credit: ATSE

SYDNEY: Robotic bushfire-fighting helicopters and treatments for a debilitating family of diseases caused by faulty proteins are some of the winners of this year's Clunies Ross Awards.

The awards, given out by the Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering, based in Melbourne, recognise scientists and engineers who have made a substantial economic, environmental or social difference to Australia.

The 2009 awards were presented last night at a glamorous black-tie dinner held at a converted wharf venue on Sydney Harbour.

Robots in the outback

Hugh Durrant-Whyte, an engineer at the University of Sydney, won one of the awards for his critical role in raising the profile of Australian robotics.

Durrant-Whyte works on 'field robotics' – large-scale robots working in remote, outdoor environments. He has pioneered research into robotic perception and navigation, with innovations allowing robots to sense, interpret, and interact with the environment.

"Australia is the ideal place to do field robotics. It's big, empty, has a small population, it relies a lot on its primary industries," he said. "If you were to pick one place in the world to do field robotics, it would be here."

Whilst robots have long been employed for manufacturing or military purposes, Durrant-Whyte has worked tirelessly to find further uses for them in an Australian context. Focussing on applications that are "dull, dirty, and dangerous," he is creating bushfire-fighting flying machines and precision crop-weeding robots – as well as others to help with mining and construction.

His robots already go where no human can, or wants, to go. They're busy mining for Rio Tinto and counting cuttlefish on the depths of the ocean floor.

Lysosomal storage disorders

Another award went to research into treatments for lysosomal storage disorders, a debilitating family of diseases that affect up to 1 in 1,000 people.

John Hopwood, a molecular geneticist with the Children, Youth and Women's Health Service in Adelaide, South Australia, has developed drugs for two well known lysosomal diseases - Hunter's syndrome and Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome.

Both these diseases cause progressive and life-limiting illness, with symptoms including reduced height; an enlarged spleen, abdomen, head and tongue; breathing problems; vision and hearing loss; and greater risk of heart disease.