WATORACE, including SE's own Kyle Anderson, won 4th place in the Indy Autonomous Challenge (IAC) virtual race #3, also capturing the Rising Star Award. The IAC brings together 18 university teams from 11 countries on 4 continents in the world’s first head-to-head, high-speed autonomous race at the famous Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS).
The IAC has a series of four virtual races before transitioning to the physical cars later in 2021. The virtual races take place in a ANSYS VRXperience simulator, which has a detailed model of both the IMS racetrack and the Dallara IL-15 open-wheel race car. The Dallara IL-15 is the official car of the Indy Lights racing series, and can reach speeds of up to 300 km/h. Clemson University is in the process of fitting out Dallara IL-15s with sensors and computers for use by the race teams when the challenge transitions to physical vehicles (after the next virtual race).
WATORACE includes undergraduate student Kyle Anderson from Software Engineering. Kyle’s contributions include adding automated checks to improve code quality, creating utilities to measure the performance of the driver program and running simulations to improve the car's lap time. Additionally, he took up a role mentoring our new interns.
The final virtual race is set to take place in May, and WATORACE is carrying over its momentum from the last race to try and claim the podium. While this will be no easy task, the team is determined to make our vehicle the fastest on the track. Succeeding in this competition will help to further Canada’s reputation as a leader in autonomous technologies.