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Magna Celebrates the Signing of Its First Complete Vehicle Manufacturing Joint Venture in China
JV to have capacity of up to 180,000 vehicles per yearFirst production of electric vehicles planned to be launched in late 2020Capability to offer EV contract manufacturing services to other potential customersZHENJIANG, China, July 24, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today Magna, BAIC Group and the Zhenjiang government celebrated the signing of a framework agreement governing… Continue reading Magna Celebrates the Signing of Its First Complete Vehicle Manufacturing Joint Venture in China
Financial Results (April-June 2019)
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News Coverage: Velodyne and Kaarta Technologies Team for Fast, Easy Surface Mapping.
July 24, 2019 Lidar technology can enable ground surface mapping solutions that help city governments plan for infrastructure improvements as well as parking and traffic management. Spencer Chin wrote a FierceElectronics story about how Kaarta has included Velodyne’s lidar technology in the new Kaarta Stencil 2-32 ground surface mapping solution. He noted that Stencil 2-32… Continue reading News Coverage: Velodyne and Kaarta Technologies Team for Fast, Easy Surface Mapping.
Velodyne Lidar Acquires Mapper.ai for ADAS Launch
July 22, 2019 Velodyne adds Mapper’s mapping and localization software to advance revolutionary lidar-centric ADAS In addition to ADAS, Velodyne will incorporate Mapper technology into lidar-centric solutions for other emerging applications, including autonomous vehicles, last-mile delivery services, security, smart cities, smart agriculture, robotics, and unmanned aerial vehicles. Velodyne Lidar, Inc. today announced it has acquired… Continue reading Velodyne Lidar Acquires Mapper.ai for ADAS Launch
AEye Redefines the Three “Rs” of LiDAR – Rate, Resolution, and Range
Company’s Intelligent Sensor Extends Metrics for Evaluating Automotive LiDAR System Performance
Pleasanton, CA – July 18, 2019 – In a new white paper released today, artificial perception pioneer AEye proposes newly extended metrics for evaluating advanced LiDAR system performance. Industry leaders recognize that the conventional metrics of frame rate, angular resolution, and detection range currently used for evaluating LiDAR performance no longer alone adequately measure the effectiveness of sensors to solve real world use cases that underlie autonomous driving. In response, AEye has proposed three new extended metrics for LiDAR evaluation: intra-frame object revisit rate, instantaneous enhanced resolution, and object classification range. The AEye white paper describes these capabilities and why they matter within the context of real-world automotive applications.
“Current metrics used for evaluating LiDAR systems designed for autonomous driving often fail to adequately address how a system will perform in real-world conditions,” said AEye co-founder and CEO, Luis Dussan. “These extended metrics are more apropos to measuring advanced LiDAR performance, and are key to evaluating systems that will solve the most challenging use cases.”
First generation LiDAR sensors passively search a scene and detect objects using scan patterns that are fixed in both time and in space, with no ability to enhance performance with a faster revisit nor to apply extra resolution to high interest areas like the road surface or intersections. A new class of advanced solid-state LiDAR sensors enable intelligent information capture that expands the capabilities of LiDAR and moves from passive “search” or detection of objects to active search and, in many cases, to the actual acquisition and classification attributes of objects in real-time making perception and path planning software safer and more effective.
Extended Metric #1: From Frame Rate to Object Revisit Rate
It is universally accepted that a single interrogation point, or shot, does not deliver enough confidence to verify a hazard. Therefore, passive LiDAR systems need multiple interrogations/detects on the same object or position over multiple frames to validate an object. New, intelligent LiDAR systems, such as AEye’s iDAR™, can revisit an object within the same frame. These agile systems can accelerate the revisit rate by allowing for intelligent shot scheduling within a frame, with the ability to interrogate an object or position multiple times within a conventional frame.
In addition, existing LiDAR systems are limited by the physics of fixed laser pulse energy, fixed dwell time, and fixed scan patterns. Next generation systems such as iDAR, are software definable by perception, path and motion planning modules so that they can dynamically adjust their data collection approach to best fit their needs. Therefore, Object Revisit Rate, or the time between two shots at the same point or set of points, is a more important and relevant metric than Frame Rate alone.
Extended Metric #2: From Angular Resolution to Instantaneous (Angular) Resolution
The assumption behind the use of resolution as a conventional LiDAR metric is that the entire Field of view will be scanned with a constant pattern and uniform power. However, AEye’s iDAR technology, based on advanced robotic vision paradigms like those utilized in missile defense systems, was developed to break this assumption. Agile LiDAR systems enable a dynamic change in both temporal and spatial sampling density within a region of interest, creating instantaneous resolution. These regions of interest can be fixed at design time, triggered by specific conditions, or dynamically generated at run-time.
“Laser power is a valuable commodity. LiDAR systems need to be able to focus their defined laser power on objects that matter, said Allan Steinhardt, Chief Scientist at AEye. “Therefore, it is beneficial to measure how much more resolution can be applied on demand to key objects in addition to merely measuring static angular resolution over a fixed pattern. If you are not intelligently scanning, you are either over sampling, or under sampling the majority of a scene, wasting precious power with no gain in information value.”
Extended Metric #3: From Detection Range to Classification Range
The traditional metric of detection range to may work for simple applications, but for autonomy the more critical performance measurement is classification range. While it has been generally assumed that LiDAR manufacturers need not know or care about how the domain controller classifies or how long it takes, this can ultimately add latency and leave the vehicle vulnerable to dangerous situations. The more a sensor can provide classification attributes, the faster the perception system can confirm and classify. Measuring classification range, in addition to detection range, will provide better assessment of an automotive LiDAR’s capabilities, since it eliminates the unknowns in the perception stack, pinpointing salient information faster.
Unlike first generation LiDAR sensors, AEye’s iDAR is an integrated, responsive perception system that mimics the way the human visual cortex focuses on and evaluates potential driving hazards. Using a distributed architecture and edge processing, iDAR dynamically tracks objects of interest, while always critically assessing general surroundings. Its software-configurable hardware enables vehicle control system software to selectively customize data collection in real-time, while edge processing reduces control loop latency. By combining software-definability, artificial intelligence, feedback loops, with smart, agile sensors, iDAR is able to capture more intelligent information with less data, faster, for optimal performance and safety.
AEye’s iDAR system uniquely architected to scale from modular ADAS solutions to fully integrated mobility/robot-taxi implementations. In order to deliver automotive-grade ADAS solutions at scale, AEye has partnered with top Tier 1 global automotive suppliers such as Hella, LG Electronics, and Aisin to design and manufacture best-in-class ADAS systems to global automakers. In addition, the company is engaged in pilots with more than a dozen non-disclosed OEMs and mobility companies.
“To create an effective sensing system, two things matter most – the quality of the data and the speed at which you can make it actionable,” said AEye Co-Founder and SVP of Engineering, Barry Behnken. “Performance metrics matter because they determine how designers and engineers approach problem-solving. These extended metrics help the industry focus on what matters most.”
About AEye
AEye is an artificial perception pioneer and creator of iDAR™, a perception system that acts as the eyes and visual cortex of autonomous vehicles. Since its demonstration of its solid-state LiDAR scanner in 2013, AEye has pioneered breakthroughs in intelligent sensing. The company is based in the San Francisco Bay Area, and backed by world-renowned investors including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Taiwania Capital, Hella Ventures, LG Electronics, Subaru-SBI, Aisin, Intel Capital, Airbus Ventures, and others.
Media Contact:
AEye, Inc.
Jennifer Deitsch
[email protected]
925-400-4366
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Revision of Outlook for Fiscal 2019 and Preliminary Q2 Key Data
Due to the following factors, Continental’s previous outlook for the 2019 fiscal year issued on May 9, 2019 will no longer be achievable: Whereas the previously communicated outlook was based on expectations of a flat development in global light vehicle production in fiscal 2019 versus the previous year, current expectations are for a decline of… Continue reading Revision of Outlook for Fiscal 2019 and Preliminary Q2 Key Data
New Power Module from Continental Combines Electric Mobility with an Outstanding Driving Experience
Third generation of power electronics provides outstanding driving performance New microchip technology enables currents of up to 650 amps Production car power module used unchanged even in race cars Regensburg, Nürnberg, Frankfurt, July 22, 2019. Continental is approaching the forthcoming changes in vehicle drive technologies with vigor and confidence. The technology company is relying here on… Continue reading New Power Module from Continental Combines Electric Mobility with an Outstanding Driving Experience
07/22/2019MAHLE reduces winter cruising range loss for electric vehicles by up to 20 percent
MAHLE reduces winter cruising range loss for electric vehicles by up to 20 percent
Stuttgart/Germany, July 22, 2019 – Modern electric vehiclespresent complex challenges for efficient thermal managementthroughout the year. It should place as light a load on the drivetrain battery as possible, particularly in wintertime. MAHLE hasdeveloped a compact and economical system based on a heatpump (Integrated Thermal System—ITS) that can increase thewinter cruising range by up to 20 percent. In addition tosignificantly reducing battery power consumption, it is easy tocontrol and can be readily adapted to future vehicle architectures.
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Press release [PDF; 147 KB]Press picture [JPG; 113 KB]Press picture 2 [JPG; 108 KB] Up to 20percent increase in range in comparison with conventional systems due to integrated system based on heat pumpSignificantly lower battery power consumption and good adaptability to vehicle architectureDue to the lack of steadily available waste heat from the engine, most electric vehicles today rely on direct resistive heating by electric heaters to heat cabin and traction battery in wintertime. This extra load on the drive train battery in cold temperatures can reduce the cruising range of a fully charged electric vehicle by up to half. In summer as well, the cruising range is shortened by the additional energy required for cooling the drive train battery and the interior of the vehicle.
In field tests with a compact electric car, MAHLE has demonstrated that its ITS reduces the loss of cruising range substantially, especially at cold ambient temperatures. The original vehicle used, equipped with conventional electric heating, started with a cruising range of 100 kilometers. When the vehicle was equipped with the ITS, the cruising range increased to 116 kilometers.
“With the ITS from MAHLE, we can improve cruising range by between 7 and 20 percent, depending on the design, which drastically reduces the loss of cruising range in wintertime in particular,” says Laurent Art, Director Advanced Engineering Thermal Management at MAHLE.
The ITS from MAHLE combines various thermal components into one system that functions in several modes. Central to its architecture is a semi-hermetic refrigerant circuit, comprising a chiller, a coolant-cooled condenser (i-condenser), a thermal expansion valve, and an electric drive compressor. The icondenser and the chiller have the same function as the condenser and evaporator in a conventional refrigerant circuit. In this case, however, instead of exchanging heat with air, the refrigerant exchanges heat with the coolant, thus generating hot and cold coolant flows. The ITS uses R1234yf as a refrigerant and the conventional vehicle coolant as the medium for heat transport between the cooling circuit and the various heat sources and sinks in the vehicle.
In addition to the low cost and environmental benefits, the ITS presents design flexibility and adaptability as added advantages. Tests for control optimization and other purposes are currently being run in the MAHLE climatic wind tunnel with the ITS installed in the vehicle. Together with American OEMs, MAHLE is working on implementing additional performance and cost optimizations.
About MAHLEMAHLE is a leading international development partner and supplier to the automotive industry as well as a pioneer for the mobility of the future. The MAHLE Group is committed to making transportation more efficient, more environmentally friendly, and more comfortable by continuously optimizing the combustion engine, driving forward the use of alternative fuels, and laying the foundation for the worldwide introduction of e-mobility. The group’s product portfolio addresses all the crucial issues relating to the powertrain and air conditioning technology—both for drives with combustion engines and for e-mobility. MAHLE products are fitted in at least every second vehicle worldwide. Components and systems from MAHLE are also used off the road—in stationary applications, for mobile machinery, rail transport, as well as marine applications.
In 2018, the group generated sales of approximately EUR 12.6 billion with more than 79,000 employees and is represented in more than 30 countries with 160 production locations. At 16 major research and development centers in Germany, Great Britain, Luxembourg, Spain, Slovenia, the USA, Brazil, Japan, China, and India, more than 6,100 development engineers and technicians are working on innovative solutions for the mobility of the future.
For further information, contact: MAHLE GmbH
Christopher Rimmele
Corporate Communications/Public Relations
Pragstraße 26–46
70376 Stuttgart/Germany
Phone: +49 711 501-12374
Fax: +49 711 501-13700
christopher.rimmele@mahle.com