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Russian Self-Driving Car Takes On Snow and Sub-Zero Conditions

Russian Self-Driving Car Takes on Snow and Sub-Zero Conditions

(Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc.’s engineers are used to the balmy conditions of California. No such luck for those at Yandex NV, Russia’s largest internet company, who posted footage of its self-driving car on public roads in icy conditions after a recent snowstorm.

Yandex.Taxi’s autonomous Toyota Prius navigated several kilometers in central Moscow during light rain and -6 Celsius (21 Fahrenheit) temperatures, according to a company blog post Friday.

The Russian company’s ultimate goal is to achieve functionality such that no steering wheel, brake pedal or human is required in order for a car to reach a destination.

Yandex.Taxi’s driveless car uses cameras and Lidar, the sensing method that uses laser pulses to measure distances. The vehicle also uses GPS, online maps and computer-vision technology to lead its movement, according to Yandex.

Snow can shroud cameras and cover the lane lines a driverless car needs to detect to remain on course. Lidar also is limited because the light pulses it emits reflect off snowflakes, potentially confusing a curtain of falling snow with something to avoid and causing the vehicle to hit the brakes.

Algorithms managing the car’s movements should adapt to the conditions, Yandex said. Once enough data from snowy roads are collected -- Yandex has been collecting such data since December -- the system learns to adjust its driving pattern, according to the company.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ilya Khrennikov in Moscow at ikhrennikov@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rebecca Penty at rpenty@bloomberg.net, Giles Turner

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