650 research outputs found

    Quadrotor: a detailed analysis on construction and operation

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    It is a type of an unmanned air vehicle (UAV) which by its name suggests that consists of 4 engines to drive it. Usually we use BLDC motors and propellers as the engines of a quad. Its motion and dynamics can be compared with that of a helicopter in regards to its transverse and longitudinal motion. It has various uses in various fields of military, business, rescue mission, modern warfare etc. They have a vertical take-off and landing system. Unlike a helicopter the propellers or blades of a “Quadrotor” have fixed pitch. Control of vehicle motion is achieved by altering the pitch and/or rotation rate of one or more rotor discs, thereby changing its torque load and thrust/lift characteristics. This will be explained in details in course of the following discussion. If we look into history of the “Quadrotor”, we get to know that it was the first step towards vertical take-off and landing vehicle. At first it was a manned vehicle but now mainly the research is focused upon a unmanned “Quadrotor” which is controlled with the help of electronic signals and various other mechanisms

    Asymptotic Vision-Based Tracking Control of the Quadrotor Aerial Vehicle

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    This paper proposes an image-based visual servo (IBVS) controller for the 3D translational motion of the quadrotor unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). The main purpose of this paper is to provide asymptotic stability for vision-based tracking control of the quadrotor in the presence of uncertainty in the dynamic model of the system. The aim of the paper also includes the use of ow of image features as the velocity information to compensate for the unreliable linear velocity data measured by accelerometers. For this purpose, the mathematical model of the quadrotor is presented based on the optic ow of image features which provides the possibility of designing a velocity-free IBVS controller with considering the dynamics of the robot. The image features are de ned from a suitable combination of perspective image moments without using the model of the object. This property allows the application of the proposed controller in unknown places. The controller is robust with respect to the uncertainties in the transla- tional dynamics of the system associated with the target motion, image depth and external disturbances. Simulation results and a comparison study are presented which demonstrate the e ectiveness of the proposed approach

    Output Feedback Image-Based Visual Servoing of Rotorcrafts

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    © 2018, Springer Nature B.V. This paper presents an improved output feedback based image-based visual servoing (IBVS) law for rotorcraft unmanned aerial vehicles (RUAVs). The control law enables a RUAV with a minimal set of sensors, i.e. an inertial measurement unit (IMU) and a single downward facing camera, to regulate its position and heading relative to a planar visual target consisting of multiple points. As compared to our previous work, twofold improvement is made. First, the desired value of the image feature of controlling the vertical motion of the RUAV is a function of other image features instead of a constant. This modification helps to keep the visual target stay in the camera’s field of view by indirectly adjusting the height of the vehicle. Second, the proposed approach simplifies our previous output feedback law by reducing the dimension of the observer filter state space while the same asymptotic stability result is kept. Both simulation and experimental results are presented to demonstrate the performance of the proposed controller

    A low-cost vision-based unmanned aerial system for extremely low-light GPS-denied navigation and thermal imaging

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    A Low-Cost Vision-Based Unmanned Aerial System for Extremely Low-Light GPS-Denied Navigation and Thermal Imaging}, abstract = {This paper presents the design and implementation details of a complete unmanned aerial system (UAS) based on commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) components, focusing on safety, security, search and rescue scenarios in GPS-denied environments. In particular, the aerial platform is capable of semi-autonomously navigating through extremely low-light, GPS-denied indoor environments based on onboard sensors only, including a downward-facing optical flow camera. Besides, an additional low-cost payload camera system is developed to stream both infrared video and visible light video to a ground station in real-time, for the purpose of detecting sign of life and hidden humans. The total cost of the complete system is estimated to be $1150, and the effectiveness of the system has been tested and validated in practical scenarios

    Asymptotic Vision-Based Tracking Control of the Quadrotor Aerial Vehicle

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    This paper proposes an image-based visual servo (IBVS) controller for the 3D translational motion of the quadrotor unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). The main purpose of this paper is to provide asymptotic stability for vision-based tracking control of the quadrotor in the presence of uncertainty in the dynamic model of the system. The aim of the paper also includes the use of ow of image features as the velocity information to compensate for the unreliable linear velocity data measured by accelerometers. For this purpose, the mathematical model of the quadrotor is presented based on the optic ow of image features which provides the possibility of designing a velocity-free IBVS controller with considering the dynamics of the robot. The image features are de ned from a suitable combination of perspective image moments without using the model of the object. This property allows the application of the proposed controller in unknown places. The controller is robust with respect to the uncertainties in the transla- tional dynamics of the system associated with the target motion, image depth and external disturbances. Simulation results and a comparison study are presented which demonstrate the e ectiveness of the proposed approach

    A low-cost vision-based unmanned aerial system for extremely low-light GPS-denied navigation and thermal imaging

    No full text
    This paper presents the design and implementation details of a complete unmanned aerial system (UAS) based on commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) components, focusing on safety, security, search and rescue scenarios in GPS-denied environments. In particular, The aerial platform is capable of semi-autonomously navigating through extremely low-light, GPS-denied indoor environments based on onboard sensors only, including a downward-facing optical flow camera. Besides, an additional low-cost payload camera system is developed to stream both infra-red video and visible light video to a ground station in real-time, for the purpose of detecting sign of life and hidden humans. The total cost of the complete system is estimated to be $1150, and the effectiveness of the system has been tested and validated in practical scenarios

    Asymptotic Vision-Based Tracking Control of the Quadrotor Aerial Vehicle

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