Gazebo simulator


Gazebo is an open-source 3D robotics simulator.
Gazebo was a component in the Player Project from 2004 through 2011. Gazebo integrated the ODE physics engine, OpenGL rendering, and support code for sensor simulation and actuator control. In 2011, Gazebo became an independent project supported by Willow Garage. In 2012, Open Source Robotics Foundation became the steward of the Gazebo project. OSRF changed its name to Open Robotics in 2018.
Gazebo can use multiple high-performance physics engines, such as ODE, Bullet, etc. It provides realistic rendering of environments including high-quality lighting, shadows, and textures. It can model sensors that "see" the simulated environment, such as laser range finders, cameras, Kinect style sensors, etc.

Competitions

Gazebo has been used as the simulation environment for a number of technology challenges and competitions.

[DARPA Robotics Challenge] (DRC)

2012 to 2015
2016 to 2017
2016 to 2017
2016 to 2019
The National Institute of Standards and Technology put on the first ARIAC Competition in June 2017. The goal of the competition was to test the agility of industrial robot systems, with the goal of enabling industrial robots on the shop floors to be more productive, more autonomous, and to require less time from shop floor workers.
|title=Service Academies Swarm Challenge|website=DARPA

[DARPA] Subterranean Challenge (SubT)

2018 to 2021
2019