476 research outputs found
Biologically Inspired Navigational Strategies Using Atmospheric Scattering Patterns
A source of accurate and reliable heading is vital for the navigation of autonomous systems such as micro-air vehicles (MAVs). It is desirous that a passive computationally efficient measure of heading is available even when magnetic heading is not. To confront this scenario, a biologically inspired methodology to determine heading based on atmospheric scattering patterns is proposed. A simplified model of the atmosphere is presented, and a hardware analog to the insect Dorsal Rim Area (DRA) photodetection is introduced. Several algorithms are developed to map the patterns of polarized and unpolarized celestial light to heading relative to the sun. Temporal information is used to determine current solar position, and then merged with solar relative heading resulting in absolute heading. Simulation and outdoor experimentation are used to validate the proposed heading determination methodology. Celestial heading measurements are shown to provide closed loop heading control of a ground based robot
1-D broadside-radiating leaky-wave antenna based on a numerically synthesized impedance surface
A newly-developed deterministic numerical technique for the automated design of metasurface antennas is applied here for the first time to the design of a 1-D printed Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA) for broadside radiation. The surface impedance synthesis process does not require any a priori knowledge on the impedance pattern, and starts from a mask constraint on the desired far-field and practical bounds on the unit cell impedance values. The designed reactance surface for broadside radiation exhibits a non conventional patterning; this highlights the merit of using an automated design process for a design well known to be challenging for analytical methods. The antenna is physically implemented with an array of metal strips with varying gap widths and simulation results show very good agreement with the predicted performance
Beam scanning by liquid-crystal biasing in a modified SIW structure
A fixed-frequency beam-scanning 1D antenna based on Liquid Crystals (LCs) is designed for application in 2D scanning with lateral alignment. The 2D array environment imposes full decoupling of adjacent 1D antennas, which often conflicts with the LC requirement of DC biasing: the proposed design accommodates both. The LC medium is placed inside a Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) modified to work as a Groove Gap Waveguide, with radiating slots etched on the upper broad wall, that radiates as a Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA). This allows effective application of the DC bias voltage needed for tuning the LCs. At the same time, the RF field remains laterally confined, enabling the possibility to lay several antennas in parallel and achieve 2D beam scanning. The design is validated by simulation employing the actual properties of a commercial LC medium
Antennas and Propagation
This Special Issue gathers topics of utmost interest in the field of antennas and propagation, such as: new directions and challenges in antenna design and propagation; innovative antenna technologies for space applications; metamaterial, metasurface and other periodic structures; antennas for 5G; electromagnetic field measurements and remote sensing applications
Mobile Robots Navigation
Mobile robots navigation includes different interrelated activities: (i) perception, as obtaining and interpreting sensory information; (ii) exploration, as the strategy that guides the robot to select the next direction to go; (iii) mapping, involving the construction of a spatial representation by using the sensory information perceived; (iv) localization, as the strategy to estimate the robot position within the spatial map; (v) path planning, as the strategy to find a path towards a goal location being optimal or not; and (vi) path execution, where motor actions are determined and adapted to environmental changes. The book addresses those activities by integrating results from the research work of several authors all over the world. Research cases are documented in 32 chapters organized within 7 categories next described
Millimeter-wave and terahertz imaging techniques
This thesis presents the development and assessment of imaging techniques in the millimeterwave (mmW) and terahertz frequency bands. In the first part of the thesis, the development of a 94 GHz passive screener based on a total-power radiometer (TPR) with mechanical beamscanning is presented. Several images have been acquired with the TPR screener demonstrator, either in indoor and outdoor environments, serving as a testbed to acquire the know-how required to perform the research presented in the following parts of the thesis.
In the second part of the thesis, a theoretical research on the performance of near-field passive screeners is described. This part stands out the tradeoff between spatial and radiometric resolutions taking into account the image distortion produced by placing the scenario in
the near-field range of the radiometer array. In addition, the impact of the decorrelation effect in the image has been also studied simulating the reconstruction technique of a synthetic aperture radiometer. Guidelines to choose the proper radiometer depending on the application, the
scenario, the acquisition speed and the tolerated image distortion are given in this part.
In the third part of the thesis, the development of a correlation technique with optical processing applicable to millimeter-wave interferometric radiometers is described. The technique is capable of correlating wide-bandwidth signals in the optical domain with no loss of radiometric sensitivity. The theoretical development of the method as well as measurements validating the suitability to correlate radiometric signals are presented in this part.
In the final part of the thesis, the frequency band of the imaging problem is increased to frequencies beyond 100 GHz, covering the THz band. In this case the research is centered in tomographic techniques that include spectral information of the samples in the reconstructed
images. The tomographic algorithm can provide detection and identification of chemical compounds that present a certain spectral footprint in the THz frequency band.Postprint (published version
Neural Radiance Fields: Past, Present, and Future
The various aspects like modeling and interpreting 3D environments and
surroundings have enticed humans to progress their research in 3D Computer
Vision, Computer Graphics, and Machine Learning. An attempt made by Mildenhall
et al in their paper about NeRFs (Neural Radiance Fields) led to a boom in
Computer Graphics, Robotics, Computer Vision, and the possible scope of
High-Resolution Low Storage Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality-based 3D
models have gained traction from res with more than 1000 preprints related to
NeRFs published. This paper serves as a bridge for people starting to study
these fields by building on the basics of Mathematics, Geometry, Computer
Vision, and Computer Graphics to the difficulties encountered in Implicit
Representations at the intersection of all these disciplines. This survey
provides the history of rendering, Implicit Learning, and NeRFs, the
progression of research on NeRFs, and the potential applications and
implications of NeRFs in today's world. In doing so, this survey categorizes
all the NeRF-related research in terms of the datasets used, objective
functions, applications solved, and evaluation criteria for these applications.Comment: 413 pages, 9 figures, 277 citation
Structural, Magnetic, Dielectric, Electrical, Optical and Thermal Properties of Nanocrystalline Materials: Synthesis, Characterization and Application
This book is a collection of the research articles and review article, published in special issue "Structural, Magnetic, Dielectric, Electrical, Optical and Thermal Properties of Nanocrystalline Materials: Synthesis, Characterization and Application"
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Biomimetic models of visual navigation - active sensing for embodied intelligence
Insects have developed small scale search behaviours to pursue navigation relevant stimuli more effectively. These often resemble a variation of Zig-Zagging, steering periodically to the left and right, therefore increasing the sampling. In this context we investigate the role of a homologous insect brain structure, the Lateral Accessory Lobe (LAL), which has been described as a pre-motor centre but received limited attention so far. Following a synthesis of the literature on the LAL we developed a steering framework, which proposes that with lateralised stimuli as input, the LAL can initiate a Zig-Zagging behaviour if the input is too weak, meaning unreliable, and targeted steering behaviours if the input is strong, thus reliable. Based on this framework we model a Spiking Neural Network (SNN) investigating a sensory modulated Central Pattern Generator (CPG) as a possible neural mechanism enabling adaptive search behaviours. We investigated the parameter space of the model to discover both the range of possible behaviours as well as which parameter combinations lead to the previously described behaviour. We found that no parameter combination accounts for the majority of observed behaviours. Furthermore, changing the computational noise levels does not lead to break-down of this behaviour. We conclude, that this neural architecture is robust to generate an adaptable Zig-Zagging behaviour. Additionally, we developed a more comprehensive network to explore the functions of known neuron-types with regard to motor control. To investigate how this steering framework might work for view based navigation, we investigated how lateralised sensory input can be used for snapshot navigation. We used a 3D-reconstruction from a LiDAR-scanned field-site (“Antworld”) to generate realistic visual stimuli. Instead of using the entire panorama, we subdivided this into two Fields of View for snapshot generation and the later image comparisons. The difference of image familiarity from both sides was subtracted to initiate a steering response into the most familiar direction. We found that a bigger Field of View alongside non-forward facing memories generated the most correct steering responses towards the snapshot direction. This demonstrates that the LAL-inspired steering framework can be functional for a complex sensori-motor task that had previously not been implicated in LAL functionality. Finally, we modelled how bilateral sensory information and a SNN model of the LAL behave in a snapshot navigation setup using Antworld. We compared the original snapshot navigation model using a panoramic Field of View with several combinations of the Core-Network and bilateral vision models: using a bilateral view, a bilateral view with the SNN, a panoramic view with SNN and other standard movement behaviours. We confirmed the findings of preliminary work, in an abstract setup, that had shown that a bilateral view combined with a SNN performs best to recover and approach navigation relevant locations. Also introducing models based on the steering framework into this visually complex environment improved the performance of agents performing snapshot navigation
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