1,961 research outputs found
A Unified Dissertation on Bearing Rigidity Theory
This work focuses on the bearing rigidity theory, namely the branch of
knowledge investigating the structural properties necessary for multi-element
systems to preserve the inter-units bearings when exposed to deformations. The
original contributions are twofold. The first one consists in the definition of
a general framework for the statement of the principal definitions and results
that are then particularized by evaluating the most studied metric spaces,
providing a complete overview of the existing literature about the bearing
rigidity theory. The second one rests on the determination of a necessary and
sufficient condition guaranteeing the rigidity properties of a given
multi-element system, independently of its metric space
Bearing-based formation control with second-order agent dynamics
We consider the distributed formation control problem for a network of agents using visual measurements. We propose solutions that are based on bearing (and optionally distance) measurements, and agents with double integrator dynamics. We assume that a subset of the agents can track, in addition to their neighbors, a set of static features in the environment. These features are not considered to be part of the formation, but they are used to asymptotically control the velocity of the agents. We analyze the convergence properties of the proposed protocols analytically and through simulations.Published versionSupporting documentatio
A distributed optimization framework for localization and formation control: applications to vision-based measurements
Multiagent systems have been a major area of research for the last 15 years. This interest has been motivated by tasks that can be executed more rapidly in a collaborative manner or that are nearly impossible to carry out otherwise. To be effective, the agents need to have the notion of a common goal shared by the entire network (for instance, a desired formation) and individual control laws to realize the goal. The common goal is typically centralized, in the sense that it involves the state of all the agents at the same time. On the other hand, it is often desirable to have individual control laws that are distributed, in the sense that the desired action of an agent depends only on the measurements and states available at the node and at a small number of neighbors. This is an attractive quality because it implies an overall system that is modular and intrinsically more robust to communication delays and node failures
Bearing-Based Formation Maneuvering
This paper studies the problem of multi-agent formation maneuver control
where both of the centroid and scale of a formation are required to track given
velocity references while maintaining the formation shape. Unlike the
conventional approaches where the target formation is defined by inter-neighbor
relative positions or distances, we propose a bearing-based approach where the
target formation is defined by inter-neighbor bearings. Due to the invariance
of the bearings, the bearing-based approach provides a natural solution to
formation scale control. We assume the dynamics of each agent as a single
integrator and propose a globally stable proportional-integral formation
maneuver control law. It is shown that at least two leaders are required to
collaborate in order to control the centroid and scale of the formation whereas
the followers are not required to have access to any global information, such
as the velocities of the leaders.Comment: To appear in the 2015 IEEE Multi-Conference on Systems and Control
(MSC2015); this is the final versio
Bearing Rigidity and Almost Global Bearing-Only Formation Stabilization
A fundamental problem that the bearing rigidity theory studies is to determine when a framework can be uniquely determined up to a translation and a scaling factor by its inter-neighbor bearings. While many previous works focused on the bearing rigidity of two-dimensional frameworks, a first contribution of this paper is to extend these results to arbitrary dimensions. It is shown that a framework in an arbitrary dimension can be uniquely determined up to a translation and a scaling factor by the bearings if and only if the framework is infinitesimally bearing rigid. In this paper, the proposed bearing rigidity theory is further applied to the bearing-only formation stabilization problem where the target formation is defined by inter-neighbor bearings and the feedback control uses only bearing measurements. Nonlinear distributed bearing-only formation control laws are proposed for the cases with and without a global orientation. It is proved that the control laws can almost globally stabilize infinitesimally bearing rigid formations. Numerical simulations are provided to support the analysis
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A Theoretical Analysis of the Conditions for Unambiguous Node Localization in Sensor Networks
In this paper we provide a theoretical foundation for the problem of network localization in which some nodes know their locations and other nodes determine their locations by measuring distances or bearings to their neighbors. Distance information is the separation between two nodes connected by a sensing/communication link. Bearing is the angle between a sensing/communication link and the x-axis of a node's local coordinate system. We construct grounded graphs to model network localization and apply graph rigidity theory and parallel drawings to test the conditions for unique localizability and to construct uniquely localizable networks. We further investigate partially localizable networks
Bearing Rigidity Theory: characterization and control of mixed formations and localization
The bearing rigidity theory is applied to mixed formations composed by agents having heterogeneous domains. Necessary and sufficient conditions are provided for the characterization of infinitesimally bearing rigid formations. The stabilization problem for such formations is addressed and a distributed solution proposed and validated through simulations. A location recovery algorithm for fully-actuated formations embedded in SE(3) is presented along with analytical proofs.ope
Modeling and control of UAV bearing formations with bilateral high-level steering
In this paper we address the problem of controlling the motion of a group of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) bound to keep a formation defined in terms of only relative angles (i.e. a bearing formation). This problem can naturally arise within the context of several multi-robot applications such as, e.g. exploration, coverage, and surveillance. First, we introduce and thoroughly analyze the concept and properties of bearing formations, and provide a class of minimally linear sets of bearings sufficient to uniquely define such formations. We then propose a bearing-only formation controller requiring only bearing measurements, converging almost globally, and maintaining bounded inter-agent distances despite the lack of direct metric information.The controller still leaves the possibility of imposing group motions tangent to the current bearing formation. These can be either autonomously chosen by the robots because of any additional task (e.g. exploration), or exploited by an assisting human co-operator. For this latter 'human-in-the-loop' case, we propose a multi-master/multi-slave bilateral shared control system providing the co-operator with some suitable force cues informative of the UAV performance. The proposed theoretical framework is extensively validated by means of simulations and experiments with quadrotor UAVs equipped with onboard cameras. Practical limitations, e.g. limited field-of-view, are also considered. © The Author(s) 2012
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