Swarms May Offer Next Level Artificial Intelligence

By John Breeden II  SEP 8 2021 
https://www.nextgov.com/ideas/2021/09/swarms-may-offer-next-level-artificial-intelligence/185177/


NASA wants to push the concept of swarm intelligence to new heights.

Swarms of drones have gotten a lot of time in the spotlight lately, mostly for 
their use in potential military operations.

The U.S. military is testing out swarm operations in simulations, while the 
British Army is using live drones operating in swarms during actual training 
operations. Other militaries are also interested in deploying swarms.

One of the biggest advantages a swarm of drones has when performing military 
operations is its resiliency.

If a swarm enters combat and several individual drones get shot down or 
otherwise incapacitated, it really doesn’t reduce the combat effectiveness of 
the swarm, nor the tactics that it uses.

A swarm of 550 drones is just about as powerful and flexible as a swarm of 600, 
even if the former has “lost” almost 10% of its initial strength.

And while that is noteworthy, it’s probably the least interesting aspect of 
swarms.

What makes them really amazing in both military and civilian applications is 
their so-called swarm intelligence, a term first coined by Gerardo Beni and 
Jing Wang in 1989 when describing the potential for cellular robotic systems.

Swarm intelligence can enable drones to act very similar to how swarms of 
insects behave in nature. Take bees, for example. Individual bees each have 
their own intelligence and jobs within a colony. But when a bee finds something 
good, like a patch of blooming flowers, it will report that information back to 
other bees that happen to be nearby when it flies back to the colony.

Interestingly enough, bees generally communicate the distance, direction and 
elevation of the discovered resource, as well as any dangers that might exist 
along the way.

These are exactly the kinds of things that an artificial swarm of flying robots 
would need to know about a target or a potential point of interest. The bees 
that receive the message can then either go off to gather juicy pollen from 
those newly discovered flowers, or share the information with more nearby bees 
until it becomes well-known within the swarm.

What makes swarms of drones, and the intelligence that drives them, different 
from a single flying robot is that individual drones interact with both other 
drones and their environment.

Then the swarm collectively makes decisions and pursues its mission based on 
different points of data that no single device could have provided.

In this way, setting relatively simple instructions or overall goals for a 
swarm and then giving it freedom to operate can result in surprisingly complex 
behaviors that extend beyond even what a single AI could accomplish.

A Hive Mind For Weather Data

NASA wants to push the concept of swarm intelligence to new heights, adding it 
to a network of small weather satellites that could coordinate their actions 
and even change their flight paths and altitudes as needed to study weather 
events from multiple angles. The program is being worked on at the Goddard 
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

The program wants to use swarms of small satellites, called SmallSats or 
CubeSats, in order to observe related weather phenomena occurring 
simultaneously around the planet and determine how they influence one another.

In that way, multiple satellites working together as a swarm may be able to 
piece a weather puzzle together in a way that no single satellite ever could.

“We already know that Saharan dust blowing over to the Amazon rainforests 
affects cloud formation over the Atlantic Ocean during certain times of the 
year,” said NASA Engineer Sabrina Thompson, who works at the Goddard Space 
Flight Center. “How do you capture that cloud formation? How do you tell a 
swarm of satellites what region and time of day is the best to observe that 
phenomenon?”

According to Thompson, the answer is that climate scientists should create a 
set of parameters for high profile weather events and general rules that a 
swarm of satellites would follow when gathering weather data. Then it would be 
up to the swarm AI to act however it thinks is best to collect that 
information, coordinating multiple satellites working together to capture the 
most useful data as quickly and efficiently as possible.

According to NASA, different swarm designs are being considered, but in all 
cases the swarm AI would have a lot of control over how it deploys its 
individual members, and how it coordinates coverage of weather events happening 
around the globe. In one possible configuration, individual satellites could 
even use the drag force of the earth to drop to lower altitudes, which might 
give them a different angle on important events like the formation of rain or 
storm clouds.

NASA already has a prototype swarm satellite in orbit, the Hyper-Angular 
Rainbow Polarimeter (HARP) CubeSat, which was launched from the International 
Space Station last year. An updated version with more advanced instrumentation 
and a wider field of view, the HARP2, is scheduled for launch in 2023.

The HARP and HARP2 satellites were developed in conjunction with The University 
of Maryland – Baltimore County (UMBC). Professor Jose Vanderlei Martins, who 
worked on the project, said that operating in a swarm would allow CubeSats to 
collect better weather data, and do so much more quickly, as long as the swarm 
AI was given a lot of autonomy over its actions.

“Enabling the swarm to make decisions and share information is crucial,” 
Martins said. “These sorts of decisions need to be made in minutes. You don’t 
have time for ground control to be involved.”

In addition to speed, having a system of smart satellites working in a swarm 
would free up its reliance on ground control operations. That might allow 
satellite swarms to operate using much smaller budgets.

John Breeden II is an award-winning journalist and reviewer with over 20 years 
of experience covering technology. He is the CEO of the Tech Writers Bureau, a 
group that creates technological thought leadership content for organizations 
of all sizes.

Twitter: @LabGuys
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