Johannes Kurth
Augsburg College
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Johannes Kurth.
At-automatisierungstechnik | 2010
Rainer Bischoff; Johannes Kurth; Günter Schreiber; Ralf Koeppe; Andreas Stemmer; Alin Albu-Schäffer; Oliver Eiberger; Alexander Beyer; Gerhard Grunwald; Gerd Hirzinger
Zusammenfassung Forschungsergebnisse in marktfähige Produkte zu verwandeln erfordert ein beträchtliches Maß an Ausdauer und starkes Unternehmertum. Der KUKA Leichtbauroboter (LBR) ist das jüngste Ergebnis einer langjährigen Forschungs- und Entwicklungskooperation zwischen der KUKA Roboter GmbH in Augsburg und dem Institut für Robotik und Mechatronik des DLR in Oberpfaffenhofen. Dieser Beitrag schildert den Weg der Produktentstehung, den innovativen Charakter des LBR und zeigt erste Anwendungsbeispiele. Abstract Transforming research results into marketable products requires considerable endurance and a strong sense of entrepreneurship. The KUKA lightweight robot (LWR) is the latest outcome of a bilateral research collaboration between KUKA Roboter, Augsburg, and the Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics at the German Aerospace Center (DLR), Oberpfaffenhofen. The stages of product genesis, the most innovative features and first application examples are presented.
Towards Service Robots for Everyday Environments | 2012
Rainer Bischoff; Günter Schreiber; Bernd Finkemeyer; Yevgen Kogan; Marinus Danzer; Johannes Kurth
Robots providing meaningful services in unconstraint environments require advanced mobility, manipulation, sensing and perception capabilities. KUKA’s task in DESIRE was to develop robot arms and control hardware and software that are flexible with respect to the number of degrees of freedom and their connections to build kinematic chains and the type of sensors used to perceive the environment. To enable the DESIRE project partners and research partners beyond the DESIRE consortium to work with advanced lightweight torque-controlled robot arms KUKA and DLR engaged in a technology transfer leading to the commercialization of the DLR Lightweight Robot. After many innovative steps, first at DLR beginning in the early 1990s, later at DLR and KUKA, both partners managed to successfully go the strenuous road from the original invention, an idea made manifest in 1991, to prototypes produced in a small series starting in December 2008 [5]. This paper first reviews the most important steps leading to this development. Second, the development of flexible controllers which enabled the project partners to integrate the KUKA-DLR Lightweight Robot in a dual-arm robot system is presented. Furthermore, independent KUKA demonstrators – an omnidirectional mobile manipulator and a dual arm system – are introduced which demonstrate the capabilities of a newly developed controller framework.
german conference on robotics | 2010
Rainer Bischoff; Johannes Kurth; Guenter Schreiber; Ralf Koeppe; Alin Albu-Schaeffer; Alexander Beyer; Oliver Eiberger; Sami Haddadin; Andreas Stemmer; Gerhard Grunwald; Gerhard Hirzinger
Archive | 2007
Rainer Bischoff; Eugen Heinze; Johannes Kurth; Günter Schreiber; Uwe Dr. Zimmermann
Archive | 2008
Rainer Bischoff; Eugen Heinze; Ralf Koeppe; Johannes Kurth; Günter Schreiber; Uwe Zimmermann
Archive | 2011
Rainer Bischoff; Tim Guhl; Johannes Kurth; Günther Schreiber; Herman Bruynincks; Ruben Smits
Archive | 2011
Volker Schmirgel; Gerhard Hietmann; Sebastian Reitelshöfer; Simon Klumpp; Johannes Kurth
Archive | 2011
Rainer Bischoff; Johannes Kurth; Tim Guhl; Günther Schreiber; Herman Bruyninckx; Ruben Smits
Archive | 2009
Johannes Kurth; Günter Schreiber; Mario Selic
Archive | 2013
Uwe Zimmermann; Johannes Kurth