• About us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact us
Neo Science Hub
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • e-Mag Archives
  • e-Learning
  • Categories
    • Healthcare & Medicine
    • Pharmaceutical & Chemical
    • Automobiles
    • Blogs
      • Anil Trigunayat
      • BOOKmarked
      • Chadha’s Corner
      • Cyber Gyan
      • Raul Over
      • Taste of Tradition
        • Dr. G. V. Purnachand
      • Vantage
    • Business Hub
    • Engineering
    • Innovations
    • Life Sciences
    • Space Technology
  • Subscribe Now
  • Contact us
  • Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • e-Mag Archives
  • e-Learning
  • Categories
    • Healthcare & Medicine
    • Pharmaceutical & Chemical
    • Automobiles
    • Blogs
      • Anil Trigunayat
      • BOOKmarked
      • Chadha’s Corner
      • Cyber Gyan
      • Raul Over
      • Taste of Tradition
        • Dr. G. V. Purnachand
      • Vantage
    • Business Hub
    • Engineering
    • Innovations
    • Life Sciences
    • Space Technology
  • Subscribe Now
  • Contact us
  • Log In
No Result
View All Result
Neo Science Hub
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • e-Mag Archives
  • e-Learning
  • Categories
  • Subscribe Now
  • Contact us
  • Log In

A swarm to save the day

Rashmi NSH by Rashmi NSH
2 years ago
in Technology, Research & Development, Science News
0
Drone_firefighting_AIRL
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A new approach by researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) seeks to use multiple swarms of drones to tackle natural disasters like forest fires.   Forest fires are becoming increasingly catastrophic across the world, accelerated by climate change.

“A swarm of drones could be the solution,” says Suresh Sundaram, Professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering, IISc. Although they have not yet been used in India, the use of drones is not entirely new. But in a new study, Sundaram’s team proposes taking the technology a step further: Coordinated multi-swarm drones swooping in to quell forest fires.

“By the time somebody identifies and reports a fire, it has already started spreading and cannot be put out with one drone,” says Sundaram. “You need to have a swarm of drones. A swarm that can communicate with each other.”

The solution was to design a special kind of algorithm that would allow the swarm to communicate with each other as well as make independent decisions. In a hypothetical scenario, when an alarm is raised about a potential fire, the swarms can be sent in, each drone armed with cameras, thermal and infrared sensors, and temperature detectors, to spot the fires. Once the fire is discovered, the drone closest to it becomes the centre of the swarm and attracts others towards it. Interestingly, each drone will also have autonomy to calculate the fire’s size and potential spread, and decide how many drones are needed to quench the fire. 

“These decisions are made by the drones,” says Sundaram. “They figure out which cluster of fire is going to spread faster, and allocate the required number of drones to put out that fire while the others look for other fire clusters.”

The swarm-based search algorithm developed by the team is key to controlling the drones’ behaviour. Searching for fire cannot be random as the area to explore would be too large. To address this, the researchers took inspiration from the foraging behaviour of a marine predator, a flagellum called Oxyrrhis marina.

“When foraging, it firsts take longer steps to explore the area. Once it feels like it is closer to the food source, it will reduce the step length and then start exploring the area in more detail,” explains Josy John, PhD student at the Department of Aerospace Engineering, and lead author of the study published in IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics: Systems. The team decided to incorporate this behaviour into their algorithm. “The temperature sensors in the drones look for a minimum [threshold] value. When that is reached, the drones reduce their search step, because the fire is near,” John adds.

The advantage of using drones, Sundaram points out, is that the decision-making is decentralised, based on data, and aimed at maximum efficiency. No more than the required number of drones will be assigned to a fire cluster, allowing others to fan out in search of other clusters. 

The researchers have tested specific components of the approach, such as the AI-enabled fire detection using thermal cameras, and accurate payload drop mechanism for fire extinguisher deployment. Full scale search and mitigation by the swarm is yet to undergo field-testing. Going forward, they plan to combine such drone swarms with unmanned ground vehicles that can carry resources and serve as refuelling stations. 

 Such drone swarms can also be helpful during other natural disasters like floods and earthquakes, to locate survivors, deliver water, food and medicines; and boost communication.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Tags: Dronesfeaturedsciencenewstechnology
Rashmi NSH

Rashmi NSH

Other Posts

Start-ups, Cold Chains & the Missing Principal

Start-ups, Cold Chains & the Missing Principal

July 16, 2026
0
The Algorithm and the Monsoon: Inside the Conclave’s ₹70,000-Crore Claim

The Algorithm and the Monsoon: Inside the Conclave’s ₹70,000-Crore Claim

July 16, 2026
0

PRECISION AT THE CORE

Feeding the Future: The Conclave That Set an Agenda and Issued No Declaration

The Helicopter India Designed for Itself — and Cannot Replace

Enzyme Gap: Why India Makes the World’s Medicines but Still Imports the Tools to Make Them

City records rise in dengue cases as monsoon pattern aids mosquito breeding

The Cancer Cell’s Three Weak Points: How Rogue DNA Loops, a Death Switch and an Immune Memory Are Redrawing Precision Oncology

Next Post
Vaping

E-cigarettes links to cancer?

Subscribe to Us

Latest Articles

Hyd Anchors Its Claim as South India’s Pharma-Manufacturing Capital as 12th Pharma Pro&Pack Expo Closes

Hyd Anchors Its Claim as South India’s Pharma-Manufacturing Capital as 12th Pharma Pro&Pack Expo Closes

July 13, 2026
13

Awiqli, World’s First Once-Weekly Basal Insulin, Launched in India

Scientists identify molecular “switch” that lets colon cancer cells spread to the liver

The Man Who Listens to Rain

Hyderabad’s polluted lakes turn into mosquito hotspots, health experts warn

The Biological Clock Rewired: Kriti Sanon’s Egg-Freezing Disclosure &  Women’s Fertility Autonomy

  • Advertise
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Refund Policy
  • Contact
For Feedback : Email Us

Copyrights © 2025 Neo Science Hub

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • e-Mag Archives
  • e-Learning
  • Categories
    • Healthcare & Medicine
    • Pharmaceutical & Chemical
    • Automobiles
    • Blogs
      • Anil Trigunayat
      • BOOKmarked
      • Chadha’s Corner
      • Cyber Gyan
      • Raul Over
      • Taste of Tradition
      • Vantage
    • Business Hub
    • Engineering
    • Innovations
    • Life Sciences
    • Space Technology
  • Subscribe Now
  • Contact us
  • Log In

Copyrights © 2025 Neo Science Hub

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Discover more from Neo Science Hub

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading