6,111 research outputs found
Continuum Deformation of a Multiple Quadcopter Payload Delivery Team without Inter-Agent Communication
This paper proposes continuum deformation as a strategy for controlling the
collective motion of a multiple quadcopter system (MQS) carrying a common
payload. Continuum deformation allows expansion and contraction of inter-agent
distances in a 2D motion plane to follow desired motions of three team leaders.
The remaining quadcopter followers establish the desired continuum deformation
only by knowing leaders positions at desired sample time waypoints without the
need for inter-agent communication over the intermediate intervals. Each
quadcopter applies a linear-quadratic-Gaussian (LQG) controller to track the
desired trajectory given by the continuum deformation in the presence of
disturbance and measurement noise. Results of simulated cooperative aerial
payload transport in the presence of uncertainty illustrate the application of
continuum deformation for coordinated transport through a narrow channel
Resource-aware IoT Control: Saving Communication through Predictive Triggering
The Internet of Things (IoT) interconnects multiple physical devices in
large-scale networks. When the 'things' coordinate decisions and act
collectively on shared information, feedback is introduced between them.
Multiple feedback loops are thus closed over a shared, general-purpose network.
Traditional feedback control is unsuitable for design of IoT control because it
relies on high-rate periodic communication and is ignorant of the shared
network resource. Therefore, recent event-based estimation methods are applied
herein for resource-aware IoT control allowing agents to decide online whether
communication with other agents is needed, or not. While this can reduce
network traffic significantly, a severe limitation of typical event-based
approaches is the need for instantaneous triggering decisions that leave no
time to reallocate freed resources (e.g., communication slots), which hence
remain unused. To address this problem, novel predictive and self triggering
protocols are proposed herein. From a unified Bayesian decision framework, two
schemes are developed: self triggers that predict, at the current triggering
instant, the next one; and predictive triggers that check at every time step,
whether communication will be needed at a given prediction horizon. The
suitability of these triggers for feedback control is demonstrated in hardware
experiments on a cart-pole, and scalability is discussed with a multi-vehicle
simulation.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, accepted article to appear in IEEE Internet of
Things Journal. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1609.0753
Gossip Algorithms for Distributed Signal Processing
Gossip algorithms are attractive for in-network processing in sensor networks
because they do not require any specialized routing, there is no bottleneck or
single point of failure, and they are robust to unreliable wireless network
conditions. Recently, there has been a surge of activity in the computer
science, control, signal processing, and information theory communities,
developing faster and more robust gossip algorithms and deriving theoretical
performance guarantees. This article presents an overview of recent work in the
area. We describe convergence rate results, which are related to the number of
transmitted messages and thus the amount of energy consumed in the network for
gossiping. We discuss issues related to gossiping over wireless links,
including the effects of quantization and noise, and we illustrate the use of
gossip algorithms for canonical signal processing tasks including distributed
estimation, source localization, and compression.Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of the IEEE, 29 page
Distributed estimation techniques forcyber-physical systems
Nowadays, with the increasing use of wireless networks, embedded devices and agents with processing and sensing capabilities, the development of distributed estimation techniques has become vital to monitor important variables of the system that are not directly available. Numerous distributed estimation techniques have been proposed in the literature according to the model of the system, noises and disturbances.
One of the main objectives of this thesis is to search all those works that deal with distributed estimation techniques applied to cyber-physical systems, system of systems and heterogeneous systems, through using systematic review methodology. Even though systematic reviews are not the common way to survey a topic in the control community, they provide a rigorous, robust and objective formula that should not be ignored. The presented systematic review incorporates and adapts the
guidelines recommended in other disciplines to the field of automation and control and presents a brief description of the different phases that constitute a systematic review.
Undertaking the systematic review many gaps were discovered: it deserves to be remarked that some estimators are not applied to cyber-physical systems, such as sliding mode observers or set-membership observers. Subsequently, one of these particular techniques was chosen, set-membership estimator, to develop new applications for cyber-physical systems. This introduces the other objectives of the thesis, i.e. to present two novel formulations of distributed set-membership
estimators. Both estimators use a multi-hop decomposition, so the dynamics of the system is rewritten to present a cascaded implementation of the distributed set-membership observer, decoupling the influence of the non-observable modes to the observable ones. So each agent must find a different set for each sub-space, instead of a unique set for all the states. Two different approaches have been used to address the same problem, that is, to design a guaranteed distributed estimation method for linear full-coupled systems affected by bounded disturbances, to be implemented in a set of distributed agents that need to communicate and collaborate to achieve this goal
Estimator-based adaptive neural network control of leader-follower high-order nonlinear multiagent systems with actuator faults
The problem of distributed cooperative control for networked multiagent systems is investigated in this paper. Each agent is modeled as an uncertain nonlinear high-order system incorporating with model uncertainty, unknown external disturbance, and actuator fault. The communication network between followers can be an undirected or a directed graph, and only some of the follower agents can obtain the commands from the leader. To develop the distributed cooperative control algorithm, a prefilter is designed, which can derive the state-space representation to a newly constructed plant. Then, a set of distributed adaptive neural network controllers are designed by making certain modifications on traditional backstepping techniques with the aid of adaptive control, neural network control, and a second-order sliding mode estimator. Rigorous proving procedures are provided,which show that uniform ultimate boundedness of all the tracking errors can be achieved in a networked multiagent system. Finally, a numerical simulation is carried out to evaluate the theoretical results
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