108 research outputs found
Equilibria, Stability, and Sensitivity for the Aerial Suspended Beam Robotic System subject to Parameter Uncertainty
This work studies how parametric uncertainties affect the cooperative
manipulation of a cable-suspended beam-shaped load by means of two aerial
robots not explicitly communicating with each other. In particular, the work
sheds light on the impact of the uncertain knowledge of the model parameters
available to an established communication-less force-based controller. First,
we find the closed-loop equilibrium configurations in the presence of the
aforementioned uncertainties, and then we study their stability. Hence, we show
the fundamental role played in the robustness of the load attitude control by
the internal force induced in the manipulated object by non-vertical cables.
Furthermore, we formally study the sensitivity of the attitude error to such
parametric variations, and we provide a method to act on the load position
error in the presence of the uncertainties. Eventually, we validate the results
through an extensive set of numerical tests in a realistic simulation
environment including underactuated aerial vehicles and sagging-prone cables,
and through hardware experiments
Force-based Pose Regulation of a Cable-Suspended Load Using UAVs with Force Bias
International audienceThis work studies how force measurement/estimation biases affect the force-based cooperative manipulation of a beam-like load suspended with cables by two aerial robots. Indeed, force biases are especially relevant in a force-based manipulation scenario in which direct communication is not relied upon. First, we compute the equilibrium configurations of the system. Then, we show that inducing an internal force in the load augments the robustness of the load attitude error and its sensitivity to force-bias variations. Eventually, we propose a method for zeroing the load position error. The results are validated through numerical simulations and experiments
Free as a Bird: Event-Based Dynamic Sense-and-Avoid for Ornithopter Robot Flight
Autonomous flight of flapping-wing robots is a major challenge for robot perception. Most of the previous sense-and-avoid works have studied the problem of obstacle avoidance for flapping-wing robots considering only static obstacles. This letter presents a fully onboard dynamic sense-and-avoid scheme for large-scale ornithopters using event cameras. These sensors trigger pixel information due to changes of illumination in the scene such as those produced by dynamic objects. The method performs event-by-event processing in low-cost hardware such as those onboard small aerial vehicles. The proposed scheme detects obstacles and evaluates possible collisions with the robot body. The onboard controller actuates over the horizontal and vertical tail deflections to execute the avoidance maneuver. The scheme is validated in both indoor and outdoor scenarios using obstacles of different shapes and sizes. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first event-based method for dynamic obstacle avoidance in a flapping-wing robot.Consejo Europeo de Investigación (ERC) 788247Comisión Europea - Proyecto AERIAL-CORE H2020-2019-871479Ministerio de Universidades FPU19/0469
Proceedings of the International Micro Air Vehicles Conference and Flight Competition 2017 (IMAV 2017)
The IMAV 2017 conference has been held at ISAE-SUPAERO, Toulouse, France from Sept. 18 to Sept. 21, 2017. More than 250 participants coming from 30 different countries worldwide have presented their latest research activities in the field of drones. 38 papers have been presented during the conference including various topics such as Aerodynamics, Aeroacoustics, Propulsion, Autopilots, Sensors, Communication systems, Mission planning techniques, Artificial Intelligence, Human-machine cooperation as applied to drones
Aerial Manipulation: A Literature Review
Aerial manipulation aims at combining the versatil- ity and the agility of some aerial platforms with the manipulation capabilities of robotic arms. This letter tries to collect the results reached by the research community so far within the field of aerial manipulation, especially from the technological and control point of view. A brief literature review of general aerial robotics and space manipulation is carried out as well
Invariant Set Distributed Explicit Reference Governors for Provably Safe On-Board Control of Nano-Quadrotor Swarms
This article provides a theory for provably safe and computationally efficient distributed constrained control, and describes an application to a swarm of nano-quadrotors with limited on-board hardware and subject to multiple state and input constraints. We provide a formal extension of the explicit reference governor framework to address the case of distributed systems. The efficacy, robustness, and scalability of the proposed theory is demonstrated by an extensive experimental validation campaign and a comparative simulation study on single and multiple nano-quadrotors. The control strategy is implemented in real-time on-board palm-sized unmanned erial vehicles, and achieves safe swarm coordination without relying on any offline trajectory computations
Aerial Field Robotics
Aerial field robotics research represents the domain of study that aims to
equip unmanned aerial vehicles - and as it pertains to this chapter,
specifically Micro Aerial Vehicles (MAVs)- with the ability to operate in
real-life environments that present challenges to safe navigation. We present
the key elements of autonomy for MAVs that are resilient to collisions and
sensing degradation, while operating under constrained computational resources.
We overview aspects of the state of the art, outline bottlenecks to resilient
navigation autonomy, and overview the field-readiness of MAVs. We conclude with
notable contributions and discuss considerations for future research that are
essential for resilience in aerial robotics.Comment: Accepted in the Encyclopedia of Robotics, Springe
Cooperation of unmanned systems for agricultural applications: A theoretical framework
Agriculture 4.0 comprises a set of technologies that combines sensors, information systems, enhanced machinery, and informed management with the objective of optimising production by accounting for variabilities and uncertainties within agricultural systems. Autonomous ground and aerial vehicles can lead to favourable improvements in management by performing in-field tasks in a time-effective way. In particular, greater benefits can be achieved by allowing cooperation and collaborative action among unmanned vehicles, both aerial and ground, to perform in-field operations in precise and time-effective ways. In this work, the preliminary and crucial step of analysing and understanding the technical and methodological challenges concerning the main problems involved is performed. An overview of the agricultural scenarios that can benefit from using collaborative machines and the corresponding cooperative schemes typically adopted in this framework are presented. A collection of kinematic and dynamic models for different categories of autonomous aerial and ground vehicles is provided, which represents a crucial step in understanding the vehicles behaviour when full autonomy is desired. Last, a collection of the state-of-the-art technologies for the autonomous guidance of drones is provided, summarising their peculiar characteristics, and highlighting their advantages and shortcomings with a specific focus on the Agriculture 4.0 framework. A companion paper reports the application of some of these techniques in a complete case study in sloped vineyards, applying the proposed multi-phase collaborative scheme introduced here
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