• About
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
Friday, May 9, 2025
    Login
FutureIOT
  • Technology
    • Sensors and Instrumentation
    • Devices
    • Cloud and Platforms
    • Research and Development
    • Governance, Standards and Regulations
    • Application and Middleware
    • Security
    • Big Data and Analytics
    • AI and Machine Learning
  • Industry
    • Manufacturing
    • Transportation and Logistics
    • Retail and E-commerce
    • Banking and Financial Services
    • Government, Healthcare and Education
    • Industrial
  • Application
    • Smart Cities
    • Future Workplace
    • Commercial
    • Smart Home
    • Customer Engagement
  • Resources
  • Podchats
  • Videos
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
  • Technology
    • Sensors and Instrumentation
    • Devices
    • Cloud and Platforms
    • Research and Development
    • Governance, Standards and Regulations
    • Application and Middleware
    • Security
    • Big Data and Analytics
    • AI and Machine Learning
  • Industry
    • Manufacturing
    • Transportation and Logistics
    • Retail and E-commerce
    • Banking and Financial Services
    • Government, Healthcare and Education
    • Industrial
  • Application
    • Smart Cities
    • Future Workplace
    • Commercial
    • Smart Home
    • Customer Engagement
  • Resources
  • Podchats
  • Videos
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
FutureIOT
No Result
View All Result
Home Industry Automotive

Bosch rounds up sensor portfolio for automated driving

Gigi Onag by Gigi Onag
January 3, 2020

Before safe automated driving can become a reality, a third sensor principle is needed in addition to camera and radar, according to Bosch Group’s Mobility Solutions business unit.

Consequently, the company is making long-range lidar sensors production-ready – the first lidar (light detection and ranging) system that is suitable for automotive use.

Bosch is an innovation leader in sensor technology for driver assistance systems and automated driving. The company has been developing and manufacturing millions of ultrasound, radar, and camera sensors in-house for many years now.

Bosch’s laser-based distance measurement technology is indispensable for driving functions at SAE Levels 3 to 5. The new Bosch sensor will cover both long and close ranges – on highways and in the city. By exploiting economies of scale, Bosch wants to reduce the price for the sophisticated technology and render it suitable for the mass market.

“By filling the sensor gap, Bosch is making automated driving a viable possibility in the first place,” said Bosch management board member Harald Kroeger.

Only the parallel deployment of three sensor principles ensures that automated driving will offer maximum safety when it is rolled out. This has been confirmed by Bosch analyses, where developers investigated all use cases of automated driving functions – from highway assist to fully automated driving in cities.

For example, if a motorcycle approaches an automated vehicle at high speed at a junction, lidar is needed in addition to camera and radar to ensure the reliable sensing of the two-wheeler. In this instance, radar can struggle to detect the bike’s narrow silhouette and plastic fairings.

Moreover, a camera can always be dazzled by harsh light falling on it. As such, there is a need for radar, camera, and lidar, with the three technologies complementing each other perfectly and delivering reliable information in every driving situation.

Lidar is an essential element in automated driving

According to Bosch, laser serves as a third eye. In lidar systems, the sensor emits laser pulses and captures the laser light that is scattered back. The system then calculates distances based on the measured time it takes for the light to bounce back.

Lidar offers very high resolution with a long range and a wide field of vision. As a result, the laser-based distance measurement tool can reliably detect even non-metallic objects at a great distance, such as rocks on the road. This means there is plenty of time to initiate driving manoeuvres such as braking or swerving. At the same time, using lidar in vehicles exposes the lidar system’s components, such as the detector and the laser, to many stresses – above all, with regard to temperature resistance and reliability over the vehicle’s entire lifetime.

Because Bosch can draw on its sensor expertise and systems know-how in the fields of radar and camera technology when developing the lidar, the company can ensure that all three sensor technologies dovetail with each other.

“We want to make automated driving safe, convenient, and fascinating. In this way, we will be making a decisive contribution to the mobility of the future,” Kroeger said. Bosch’s long-range lidar will not only fulfil all safety requirements for automated driving, it will also enable automakers to efficiently integrate the technology into a very wide range of vehicle types in the future.

AI makes assistance systems even safer

In 2019, Bosch sales of driver assistance systems rose by 12% to around 2 billion euros. These assistance systems are paving the way for automated driving.

Recently, Bosch engineers succeeded in taking the camera technology used in cars to a new level by enhancing it with artificial intelligence. The camera technology detects objects, categorises them into classes such as vehicles, pedestrians, or bicycles, and measures their movement.

In congested urban traffic, the camera can also recognise and classify partially obscured or crossing vehicles, pedestrians, and cyclists quickly and reliably. This allows the vehicle to trigger a warning or an emergency braking manoeuvre as required.

Bosch engineers are also continuously refining radar technology. The latest generation of Bosch radar sensors is even better at capturing the vehicle’s surroundings – including in bad weather or poor light conditions. Their greater detection range, wide aperture, and high angular separability are the basis for this improved performance.

Related:  City University of Hong Kong presents Internet of Things in Banking
Tags: Artificial Intelligenceautomotive technologyautonomous drivingautonomous vehiclesBoschcamerasIoT sensorslidarsradar
Gigi Onag

Gigi Onag

Gigi has more than 15 years of experience in technology journalism, covering various aspects of enterprise IT and telecommunications from both business and technology perspective. Before joining CXOCIETY as editor for FutureIoT in July 2019, she was assistant editor of ComputerWorld Hong Kong. Based in Hong Kong, she started with regional IT publications under CMP Asia (now Informa), including Asia Computer Weekly, Intelligent Enterprise Asia and Network Computing Asia and Teledotcom Asia. She had contributed articles to South China Morning Post, TechTarget and PC Market among others.

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Standardisation and tech are keys to unlocking growth in Asia's supply chains
  • AI to fuel the rise of zero touch networks
  • Surge in ambient IoT to pave the way for sustainable tech
  • Imbibing AI skills into Singapore’s future workforce today
  • Asia Pacific's AI ambitions hinge on next-generation networks

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • AI and Machine Learning
  • Application
  • Application and Middleware
  • Automotive
  • Banking and Financial Services
  • Big Data and Analytics
  • Blockchain
  • Case Studies
  • Change Healthcare
  • CHRO
  • Cloud and Platforms
  • Commercial
  • Construction
  • Consumer
  • Customer Engagement
  • Devices
  • ESG
  • Future Workplace
  • FutureCOO
  • Governance, Standards and Regulations
  • Government, Healthcare and Education
  • Hospitality and Tourism
  • Industrial
  • Industry
  • IT-OT integration
  • Manufacturing
  • Networking
  • Operations
  • Research and Development
  • Retail and E-commerce
  • Security
  • Sensors and Instrumentation
  • Smart Cities
  • smart contracts
  • Smart Home
  • Start-ups
  • Supply chain
  • Technology
  • Telecommunications
  • TIBCO
  • Transportation and Logistics
  • Videos
  • Whitepapers

About FutureIoT

Asia’s ONLY dedicated IoT publication

The race to harness the power of Internet of Things (IoT) is here. FutureIoT is dedicated to individuals, as well as public and private organizations looking to tap the potential of IoT to transform the way we live, work and do business. FutureIoT is the dedicated media that provides the single source of truth about IoT, the technology, its application and regulation, originating from Asia. << Read more >>

Quick Links

  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms of Use

Categories

Recent News

Standardisation and tech are keys to unlocking growth in Asia's supply chains

Standardisation and tech are keys to unlocking growth in Asia's supply chains

May 9, 2025
Photo by Polina Tankilevitch: https://www.pexels.com/photo/hand-of-a-woman-showing-palm-with-a-word-no-4830656/

AI to fuel the rise of zero touch networks

May 8, 2025
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Policy

Copyright © 2022 Cxociety Pte Ltd | Designed by Pixl

Login to your account below

or

Not a member yet? Register here

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

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

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Technology
    • Sensors and Instrumentation
    • Devices
    • Cloud and Platforms
    • Research and Development
    • Governance, Standards and Regulations
    • Application and Middleware
    • Security
    • Big Data and Analytics
    • AI and Machine Learning
  • Industry
    • Manufacturing
    • Transportation and Logistics
    • Retail and E-commerce
    • Banking and Financial Services
    • Government, Healthcare and Education
    • Industrial
  • Application
    • Smart Cities
    • Future Workplace
    • Commercial
    • Smart Home
    • Customer Engagement
  • Resources
  • Podchats
  • Videos
  • Events
Login

Copyright © 2022 Cxociety Pte Ltd | Designed by Pixl

Subscribe