Skip to main content

Ansys and Velodyne team up on AV safety

Lidar sensors will improved hazard identification for highly advanced autonomous vehicles
By Ben Spencer May 4, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Ansys says engineers will be able to model driving scenarios across millions of miles (image credit: Ansys)

Ansys and Velodyne are developing software models of automotive Lidar sensors to provide improved hazard identification capabilities for highly advanced autonomous vehicles (AV).

Ansys says one of the challenges facing many advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) is the robustness of the system to dependably test and recognise potentially dangerous “edge case scenarios”.

To manage these anomalies, the company points out that AVs require Lidar as a redundant detection technology that effectively locates and tracks objects across a wide range of operational situations.

However, Lidar sensors must perform “countless miles of exhaustive testing” to be validated as reliable, which “radically increases the development cost of the system”. 

Velodyne is to integrate an encrypted 'black box' physics-based Lidar sensor model into Ansys VRxperience, a real-time interactive driving simulator that models, evaluates and validates lidar designs within a realistic virtual environment.

Ansys says this capability helps engineers model countless driving scenarios across millions of miles and substantially reduce physical tests. 

VRxperience is expected to reduce development costs for OEMs integrating Velodyne into their ADAS portfolio by enabling by enhancing lidar placement within AVs and validating their performance. 

Velodyne Lidar CEO Anand Gopalan says: “Our collaboration helps engineers virtually run their ADAS applications in challenging roadway conditions so they can build solutions that achieve safe navigation and collision avoidance."

Prith Banerjee, chief technology officer at Ansys, says: "Using VRxperience, OEMs will validate the Lidar's software stack and have full access to a validated sensor model, while preserving Velodyne's IP. This will enable Velodyne to rapidly and cost-effectively design trailblazing Lidar sensors and significantly speed delivery to market."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Ptolemus' short guide to picking an ITS winner
    January 11, 2024
    What makes a good ITS investment and what are the chances of the money coming into transportation creating an unsustainable bubble? Frederic Bruneteau and Alberto Lodieu of Ptolemus Consulting Group take a look at the market and suggest some key areas of interest for the future
  • Iteris' $3.3m intersection deal solves dilemma
    May 18, 2021
    City of Modesto, California, will improve traffic flow while saving money, says Iteris
  • Cubic’s cross-mode collaboration
    October 13, 2020
    The State of Yucatán saw the increasing need to build its transportation management infrastructure to aid Mérida’s quest to join the next generation of smart cities. Private vehicle traffic and bus transit are major components of Mérida’s transportation network and they realised the importance of giving transit signal priority and real-time passenger information to improve the traveller experience.
  • Volvo helps realise DiDi AV plans
    April 28, 2021
    Combined tech will eventually allow autonomous vehicles to operate without safety drivers