9,869 research outputs found
Find your Way by Observing the Sun and Other Semantic Cues
In this paper we present a robust, efficient and affordable approach to
self-localization which does not require neither GPS nor knowledge about the
appearance of the world. Towards this goal, we utilize freely available
cartographic maps and derive a probabilistic model that exploits semantic cues
in the form of sun direction, presence of an intersection, road type, speed
limit as well as the ego-car trajectory in order to produce very reliable
localization results. Our experimental evaluation shows that our approach can
localize much faster (in terms of driving time) with less computation and more
robustly than competing approaches, which ignore semantic information
Satellite Navigation for the Age of Autonomy
Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) brought navigation to the masses.
Coupled with smartphones, the blue dot in the palm of our hands has forever
changed the way we interact with the world. Looking forward, cyber-physical
systems such as self-driving cars and aerial mobility are pushing the limits of
what localization technologies including GNSS can provide. This autonomous
revolution requires a solution that supports safety-critical operation,
centimeter positioning, and cyber-security for millions of users. To meet these
demands, we propose a navigation service from Low Earth Orbiting (LEO)
satellites which deliver precision in-part through faster motion, higher power
signals for added robustness to interference, constellation autonomous
integrity monitoring for integrity, and encryption / authentication for
resistance to spoofing attacks. This paradigm is enabled by the 'New Space'
movement, where highly capable satellites and components are now built on
assembly lines and launch costs have decreased by more than tenfold. Such a
ubiquitous positioning service enables a consistent and secure standard where
trustworthy information can be validated and shared, extending the electronic
horizon from sensor line of sight to an entire city. This enables the
situational awareness needed for true safe operation to support autonomy at
scale.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 2020 IEEE/ION Position, Location and Navigation
Symposium (PLANS
Radar-only ego-motion estimation in difficult settings via graph matching
Radar detects stable, long-range objects under variable weather and lighting
conditions, making it a reliable and versatile sensor well suited for
ego-motion estimation. In this work, we propose a radar-only odometry pipeline
that is highly robust to radar artifacts (e.g., speckle noise and false
positives) and requires only one input parameter. We demonstrate its ability to
adapt across diverse settings, from urban UK to off-road Iceland, achieving a
scan matching accuracy of approximately 5.20 cm and 0.0929 deg when using GPS
as ground truth (compared to visual odometry's 5.77 cm and 0.1032 deg). We
present algorithms for keypoint extraction and data association, framing the
latter as a graph matching optimization problem, and provide an in-depth system
analysis.Comment: 6 content pages, 1 page of references, 5 figures, 4 tables, 2019 IEEE
International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA
- …