Short Title: Int. J. Mech. Eng. Robot. Res.
Frequency: Bimonthly
Professor of School of Engineering, Design and Built Environment, Western Sydney University, Australia. His research interests cover Industry 4.0, Additive Manufacturing, Advanced Engineering Materials and Structures (Metals and Composites), Multi-scale Modelling of Materials and Structures, Metal Forming and Metal Surface Treatment.
2024-12-18
2024-10-25
Abstract— War robots clearly hold tremendous advantages-from saving the lives of our own soldiers, to safely defusing road side bombs, to operating in inaccessible and dangerous environments such as mountain side caves and underwater. Without emotions and other liabilities on the battlefield, they could conduct warfare more ethically and effectively than human soldiers who are susceptible to overreactions, anger, vengeance, fatigue, low morale, and so on. But the use of robots, especially autonomous ones, raises a host of ethical and risk issues. Index Terms— Need, Robot, Electronics warfare
Cite: Shubhangi Nikhar and Achal Shahare, " Need To Develop Robot for Electronics Warfare-A Review," International Journal of Mechanical Engineering and Robotics Research, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 359-366, April 2014.