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Random Finite Set Theory and Optimal Control of Large Collaborative Swarms
Controlling large swarms of robotic agents has many challenges including, but
not limited to, computational complexity due to the number of agents,
uncertainty in the functionality of each agent in the swarm, and uncertainty in
the swarm's configuration. This work generalizes the swarm state using Random
Finite Set (RFS) theory and solves the control problem using Model Predictive
Control (MPC) to overcome the aforementioned challenges. Computationally
efficient solutions are obtained via the Iterative Linear Quadratic Regulator
(ILQR). Information divergence is used to define the distance between the swarm
RFS and the desired swarm configuration. Then, a stochastic optimal control
problem is formulated using a modified L2^2 distance. Simulation results using
MPC and ILQR show that swarm intensities converge to a target destination, and
the RFS control formulation can vary in the number of target destinations. ILQR
also provides a more computationally efficient solution to the RFS swarm
problem when compared to the MPC solution. Lastly, the RFS control solution is
applied to a spacecraft relative motion problem showing the viability for this
real-world scenario.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1801.0731
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