132,012 research outputs found
Controlling rigid formations of mobile agents under inconsistent measurements
Despite the great success of using gradient-based controllers to stabilize
rigid formations of autonomous agents in the past years, surprising yet
intriguing undesirable collective motions have been reported recently when
inconsistent measurements are used in the agents' local controllers. To make
the existing gradient control robust against such measurement inconsistency, we
exploit local estimators following the well known internal model principle for
robust output regulation control. The new estimator-based gradient control is
still distributed in nature and can be constructed systematically even when the
number of agents in a rigid formation grows. We prove rigorously that the
proposed control is able to guarantee exponential convergence and then
demonstrate through robotic experiments and computer simulations that the
reported inconsistency-induced orbits of collective movements are effectively
eliminated.Comment: 10 page
A distributed optimization framework for localization and formation control: applications to vision-based measurements
Multiagent systems have been a major area of research for the last 15 years. This interest has been motivated by tasks that can be executed more rapidly in a collaborative manner or that are nearly impossible to carry out otherwise. To be effective, the agents need to have the notion of a common goal shared by the entire network (for instance, a desired formation) and individual control laws to realize the goal. The common goal is typically centralized, in the sense that it involves the state of all the agents at the same time. On the other hand, it is often desirable to have individual control laws that are distributed, in the sense that the desired action of an agent depends only on the measurements and states available at the node and at a small number of neighbors. This is an attractive quality because it implies an overall system that is modular and intrinsically more robust to communication delays and node failures
Distributed Consensus of Linear Multi-Agent Systems with Switching Directed Topologies
This paper addresses the distributed consensus problem for a linear
multi-agent system with switching directed communication topologies. By
appropriately introducing a linear transformation, the consensus problem is
equivalently converted to a stabilization problem for a class of switched
linear systems. Some sufficient consensus conditions are then derived by using
tools from the matrix theory and stability analysis of switched systems. It is
proved that consensus in such a multi-agent system can be ensured if each agent
is stabilizable and each possible directed topology contains a directed
spanning tree. Finally, a numerical simulation is given for illustration.Comment: The paper will be presented at the 2014 Australian Control Conference
(AUCC 2014), Canberra, Australi
Bearing-based formation control with second-order agent dynamics
We consider the distributed formation control problem for a network of agents using visual measurements. We propose solutions that are based on bearing (and optionally distance) measurements, and agents with double integrator dynamics. We assume that a subset of the agents can track, in addition to their neighbors, a set of static features in the environment. These features are not considered to be part of the formation, but they are used to asymptotically control the velocity of the agents. We analyze the convergence properties of the proposed protocols analytically and through simulations.Published versionSupporting documentatio
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