964 research outputs found
A robot swarm assisting a human fire-fighter
Emergencies in industrial warehouses are a major concern for fire-fighters. The large dimensions, together with the development of dense smoke that drastically reduces visibility, represent major challenges. The GUARDIANS robot swarm is designed to assist fire-fighters in searching a large warehouse. In this paper we discuss the technology developed for a swarm of robots assisting fire-fighters. We explain the swarming algorithms that provide the functionality by which the robots react to and follow humans while no communication is required. Next we discuss the wireless communication system, which is a so-called mobile ad-hoc network. The communication network provides also the means to locate the robots and humans. Thus, the robot swarm is able to provide guidance information to the humans. Together with the fire-fighters we explored how the robot swarm should feed information back to the human fire-fighter. We have designed and experimented with interfaces for presenting swarm-based information to human beings
GUARDIANS final report
Emergencies in industrial warehouses are a major concern for firefghters. The large dimensions together with the development of dense smoke that drastically reduces visibility, represent major challenges. The Guardians robot swarm is designed to assist fire fighters in searching a
large warehouse. In this report we discuss the technology developed for a swarm of robots searching and assisting fire fighters. We explain the swarming algorithms which provide the functionality by which the robots react to and follow humans while no communication is required. Next we
discuss the wireless communication system, which is a so-called mobile ad-hoc network. The communication network provides also one of the means to locate the robots and humans. Thus the robot swarm is able to locate itself and provide guidance information to the humans. Together with
the re ghters we explored how the robot swarm should feed information back to the human fire fighter. We have designed and experimented with interfaces for presenting swarm based information to human beings
Past, Present, and Future of Simultaneous Localization And Mapping: Towards the Robust-Perception Age
Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM)consists in the concurrent
construction of a model of the environment (the map), and the estimation of the
state of the robot moving within it. The SLAM community has made astonishing
progress over the last 30 years, enabling large-scale real-world applications,
and witnessing a steady transition of this technology to industry. We survey
the current state of SLAM. We start by presenting what is now the de-facto
standard formulation for SLAM. We then review related work, covering a broad
set of topics including robustness and scalability in long-term mapping, metric
and semantic representations for mapping, theoretical performance guarantees,
active SLAM and exploration, and other new frontiers. This paper simultaneously
serves as a position paper and tutorial to those who are users of SLAM. By
looking at the published research with a critical eye, we delineate open
challenges and new research issues, that still deserve careful scientific
investigation. The paper also contains the authors' take on two questions that
often animate discussions during robotics conferences: Do robots need SLAM? and
Is SLAM solved
Sensor-Based Topological Coverage And Mapping Algorithms For Resource-Constrained Robot Swarms
Coverage is widely known in the field of sensor networks as the task of deploying sensors to completely cover an environment with the union of the sensor footprints. Related to coverage is the task of exploration that includes guiding mobile robots, equipped with sensors, to map an unknown environment (mapping) or clear a known environment (searching and pursuit- evasion problem) with their sensors. This is an essential task for robot swarms in many robotic applications including environmental monitoring, sensor deployment, mine clearing, search-and-rescue, and intrusion detection. Utilizing a large team of robots not only improves the completion time of such tasks, but also improve the scalability of the applications while increasing the robustness to systems’ failure.
Despite extensive research on coverage, mapping, and exploration problems, many challenges remain to be solved, especially in swarms where robots have limited computational and sensing capabilities. The majority of approaches used to solve the coverage problem rely on metric information, such as the pose of the robots and the position of obstacles. These geometric approaches are not suitable for large scale swarms due to high computational complexity and sensitivity to noise. This dissertation focuses on algorithms that, using tools from algebraic topology and bearing-based control, solve the coverage related problem with a swarm of resource-constrained robots.
First, this dissertation presents an algorithm for deploying mobile robots to attain a hole-less sensor coverage of an unknown environment, where each robot is only capable of measuring the bearing angles to the other robots within its sensing region and the obstacles that it touches. Next, using the same sensing model, a topological map of an environment can be obtained using graph-based search techniques even when there is an insufficient number of robots to attain full coverage of the environment. We then introduce the landmark complex representation and present an exploration algorithm that not only is complete when the landmarks are sufficiently dense but also scales well with any swarm size. Finally, we derive a multi-pursuers and multi-evaders planning algorithm, which detects all possible evaders and clears complex environments
Collaborative autonomy in heterogeneous multi-robot systems
As autonomous mobile robots become increasingly connected and widely deployed in different domains, managing multiple robots and their interaction is key to the future of ubiquitous autonomous systems. Indeed, robots are not individual entities anymore. Instead, many robots today are deployed as part of larger fleets or in teams. The benefits of multirobot collaboration, specially in heterogeneous groups, are multiple. Significantly higher degrees of situational awareness and understanding of their environment can be achieved when robots with different operational capabilities are deployed together. Examples of this include the Perseverance rover and the Ingenuity helicopter that NASA has deployed in Mars, or the highly heterogeneous robot teams that explored caves and other complex environments during the last DARPA Sub-T competition.
This thesis delves into the wide topic of collaborative autonomy in multi-robot systems, encompassing some of the key elements required for achieving robust collaboration: solving collaborative decision-making problems; securing their operation, management and interaction; providing means for autonomous coordination in space and accurate global or relative state estimation; and achieving collaborative situational awareness through distributed perception and cooperative planning. The thesis covers novel formation control algorithms, and new ways to achieve accurate absolute or relative localization within multi-robot systems. It also explores the potential of distributed ledger technologies as an underlying framework to achieve collaborative decision-making in distributed robotic systems.
Throughout the thesis, I introduce novel approaches to utilizing cryptographic elements and blockchain technology for securing the operation of autonomous robots, showing that sensor data and mission instructions can be validated in an end-to-end manner. I then shift the focus to localization and coordination, studying ultra-wideband (UWB) radios and their potential. I show how UWB-based ranging and localization can enable aerial robots to operate in GNSS-denied environments, with a study of the constraints and limitations. I also study the potential of UWB-based relative localization between aerial and ground robots for more accurate positioning in areas where GNSS signals degrade. In terms of coordination, I introduce two new algorithms for formation control that require zero to minimal communication, if enough degree of awareness of neighbor robots is available. These algorithms are validated in simulation and real-world experiments. The thesis concludes with the integration of a new approach to cooperative path planning algorithms and UWB-based relative localization for dense scene reconstruction using lidar and vision sensors in ground and aerial robots
Active SLAM: A Review On Last Decade
This article presents a comprehensive review of the Active Simultaneous
Localization and Mapping (A-SLAM) research conducted over the past decade. It
explores the formulation, applications, and methodologies employed in A-SLAM,
particularly in trajectory generation and control-action selection, drawing on
concepts from Information Theory (IT) and the Theory of Optimal Experimental
Design (TOED). This review includes both qualitative and quantitative analyses
of various approaches, deployment scenarios, configurations, path-planning
methods, and utility functions within A-SLAM research. Furthermore, this
article introduces a novel analysis of Active Collaborative SLAM (AC-SLAM),
focusing on collaborative aspects within SLAM systems. It includes a thorough
examination of collaborative parameters and approaches, supported by both
qualitative and statistical assessments. This study also identifies limitations
in the existing literature and suggests potential avenues for future research.
This survey serves as a valuable resource for researchers seeking insights into
A-SLAM methods and techniques, offering a current overview of A-SLAM
formulation.Comment: 34 pages, 8 figures, 6 table
GUARDIANS final report part 1 (draft): a robot swarm assisting a human fire fighter
Emergencies in industrial warehouses are a major concern for fire fighters. The large dimensions together with the development of dense smoke that drastically reduces visibility, represent major challenges. The Guardians robot swarm is designed to assist re ghters in searching a
large warehouse. In this paper we discuss the technology developed for a swarm of robots assisting re ghters. We explain the swarming algorithms which provide the functionality by which the robots react to and follow humans while no communication is required. Next we discuss the wireless communication system, which is a so-called mobile ad-hoc network. The communication network provides also the means to locate the robots and humans. Thus the robot swarm is able to provide guidance information to the humans. Together with the fire fighters we explored how
the robot swarm should feed information back to the human fire fighter. We have designed and experimented with interfaces for presenting swarm based information to human beings
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