250 research outputs found
Exploration of Finite 2D Square Grid by a Metamorphic Robotic System
We consider exploration of finite 2D square grid by a metamorphic robotic
system consisting of anonymous oblivious modules. The number of possible shapes
of a metamorphic robotic system grows as the number of modules increases. The
shape of the system serves as its memory and shows its functionality. We
consider the effect of global compass on the minimum number of modules
necessary to explore a finite 2D square grid. We show that if the modules agree
on the directions (north, south, east, and west), three modules are necessary
and sufficient for exploration from an arbitrary initial configuration,
otherwise five modules are necessary and sufficient for restricted initial
configurations
Gathering on Rings for Myopic Asynchronous Robots With Lights
We investigate gathering algorithms for asynchronous autonomous mobile robots moving in uniform ring-shaped networks. Different from most work using the Look-Compute-Move (LCM) model, we assume that robots have limited visibility and lights. That is, robots can observe nodes only within a certain fixed distance, and emit a color from a set of constant number of colors. We consider gathering algorithms depending on two parameters related to the initial configuration: M_{init}, which denotes the number of nodes between two border nodes, and O_{init}, which denotes the number of nodes hosting robots between two border nodes. In both cases, a border node is a node hosting one or more robots that cannot see other robots on at least one side. Our main contribution is to prove that, if M_{init} or O_{init} is odd, gathering is always feasible with three or four colors. The proposed algorithms do not require additional assumptions, such as knowledge of the number of robots, multiplicity detection capabilities, or the assumption of towerless initial configurations. These results demonstrate the power of lights to achieve gathering of robots with limited visibility
Terminating Exploration Of A Grid By An Optimal Number Of Asynchronous Oblivious Robots
International audienceWe consider swarms of asynchronous oblivious robots evolving into an anonymous grid-shaped network. In this context, we investigate optimal (w.r.t. the number of robots) deterministic solutions for the terminating exploration problem. We first show lower bounds in the semi-synchronous model. Precisely, we show that at least three robots are required to explore any grid of at least three nodes, even in the probabilistic case. Then, we show that at least four (resp. five) robots are necessary to deterministically explore a (2,2)-Grid (resp. a (3,3)-Grid). We then propose deterministic algorithms in the asynchronous model. This latter being strictly weakest than the semi-synchronous model, all the aforementioned bounds still hold in that context. Our algorithms actually exhibit the optimal number of robots that is necessary to explore a given grid. Overall, our results show that except in two particular cases, three robots are necessary and sufficient to deterministically explore a grid of at least three nodes and then terminate. The optimal number of robots for the two remaining cases is four for the (2,2)-Grid and five for the (3,3)-Grid, respectively
Parameterized Verification of Algorithms for Oblivious Robots on a Ring
We study verification problems for autonomous swarms of mobile robots that
self-organize and cooperate to solve global objectives. In particular, we focus
in this paper on the model proposed by Suzuki and Yamashita of anonymous robots
evolving in a discrete space with a finite number of locations (here, a ring).
A large number of algorithms have been proposed working for rings whose size is
not a priori fixed and can be hence considered as a parameter. Handmade
correctness proofs of these algorithms have been shown to be error-prone, and
recent attention had been given to the application of formal methods to
automatically prove those. Our work is the first to study the verification
problem of such algorithms in the parameter-ized case. We show that safety and
reachability problems are undecidable for robots evolving asynchronously. On
the positive side, we show that safety properties are decidable in the
synchronous case, as well as in the asynchronous case for a particular class of
algorithms. Several properties on the protocol can be decided as well. Decision
procedures rely on an encoding in Presburger arithmetics formulae that can be
verified by an SMT-solver. Feasibility of our approach is demonstrated by the
encoding of several case studies
A Certified Universal Gathering Algorithm for Oblivious Mobile Robots
We present a new algorithm for the problem of universal gathering mobile
oblivious robots (that is, starting from any initial configuration that is not
bivalent, using any number of robots, the robots reach in a finite number of
steps the same position, not known beforehand) without relying on a common
chirality. We give very strong guaranties on the correctness of our algorithm
by proving formally that it is correct, using the COQ proof assistant. To our
knowledge, this is the first certified positive (and constructive) result in
the context of oblivious mobile robots. It demonstrates both the effectiveness
of the approach to obtain new algorithms that are truly generic, and its
managability since the amount of developped code remains human readable
Finding Water on Poleless Using Melomaniac Myopic Chameleon Robots
In 2042, the exoplanet exploration program, launched in 2014 by NASA, finally discovers a new exoplanet so-called Poleless, due to the fact that it is not subject to any magnetism. A new generation of autonomous mobile robots, called M2C (for Melomaniac Myopic Chameleon), have been designed to find water on Poleless. To address this problem, we investigate optimal (w.r.t., visibility range and number of used colors) solutions to the infinite grid exploration problem (IGE) by a small team of M2C robots. Our first result shows that minimizing the visibility range and the number of used colors are two orthogonal issues: it is impossible to design a solution to the IGE problem that is optimal w.r.t. both parameters simultaneously. Consequently, we address optimality of these two criteria separately by proposing two algorithms; the former being optimal in terms of visibility range, the latter being optimal in terms of number of used colors. It is worth noticing that these two algorithms use a very small number of robots, respectively six and eight
Certified Impossibility Results for Byzantine-Tolerant Mobile Robots
We propose a framework to build formal developments for robot networks using
the COQ proof assistant, to state and to prove formally various properties. We
focus in this paper on impossibility proofs, as it is natural to take advantage
of the COQ higher order calculus to reason about algorithms as abstract
objects. We present in particular formal proofs of two impossibility results
forconvergence of oblivious mobile robots if respectively more than one half
and more than one third of the robots exhibit Byzantine failures, starting from
the original theorems by Bouzid et al.. Thanks to our formalization, the
corresponding COQ developments are quite compact. To our knowledge, these are
the first certified (in the sense of formally proved) impossibility results for
robot networks
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