5,903 research outputs found
Robust Distance-Based Formation Control of Multiple Rigid Bodies with Orientation Alignment
This paper addresses the problem of distance- and orientation-based formation
control of a class of second-order nonlinear multi-agent systems in 3D space,
under static and undirected communication topologies. More specifically, we
design a decentralized model-free control protocol in the sense that each agent
uses only local information from its neighbors to calculate its own control
signal, without incorporating any knowledge of the model nonlinearities and
exogenous disturbances. Moreover, the transient and steady state response is
solely determined by certain designer-specified performance functions and is
fully decoupled by the agents' dynamic model, the control gain selection, the
underlying graph topology as well as the initial conditions. Additionally, by
introducing certain inter-agent distance constraints, we guarantee collision
avoidance and connectivity maintenance between neighboring agents. Finally,
simulation results verify the performance of the proposed controllers.Comment: IFAC Word Congress 201
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
Consensus Control for Leader-follower Multi-agent Systems under Prescribed Performance Guarantees
This paper addresses the problem of distributed control for leader-follower
multi-agent systems under prescribed performance guarantees. Leader-follower is
meant in the sense that a group of agents with external inputs are selected as
leaders in order to drive the group of followers in a way that the entire
system can achieve consensus within certain prescribed performance transient
bounds. Under the assumption of tree graphs, a distributed control law is
proposed when the decay rate of the performance functions is within a
sufficient bound. Then, two classes of tree graphs that can have additional
followers are investigated. Finally, several simulation examples are given to
illustrate the results.Comment: 8 page
Safety Barrier Certificates for Heterogeneous Multi-Robot Systems
This paper presents a formal framework for collision avoidance in multi-robot
systems, wherein an existing controller is modified in a minimally invasive
fashion to ensure safety. We build this framework through the use of control
barrier functions (CBFs) which guarantee forward invariance of a safe set;
these yield safety barrier certificates in the context of heterogeneous robot
dynamics subject to acceleration bounds. Moreover, safety barrier certificates
are extended to a distributed control framework, wherein neighboring agent
dynamics are unknown, through local parameter identification. The end result is
an optimization-based controller that formally guarantees collision free
behavior in heterogeneous multi-agent systems by minimally modifying the
desired controller via safety barrier constraints. This formal result is
verified in simulation on a multi-robot system consisting of both cumbersome
and agile robots, is demonstrated experimentally on a system with a Magellan
Pro robot and three Khepera III robots.Comment: 8 pages version of 2016ACC conference paper, experimental results
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An Overview of Recent Progress in the Study of Distributed Multi-agent Coordination
This article reviews some main results and progress in distributed
multi-agent coordination, focusing on papers published in major control systems
and robotics journals since 2006. Distributed coordination of multiple
vehicles, including unmanned aerial vehicles, unmanned ground vehicles and
unmanned underwater vehicles, has been a very active research subject studied
extensively by the systems and control community. The recent results in this
area are categorized into several directions, such as consensus, formation
control, optimization, task assignment, and estimation. After the review, a
short discussion section is included to summarize the existing research and to
propose several promising research directions along with some open problems
that are deemed important for further investigations
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