277 research outputs found
Critically fast pick-and-place with suction cups
Fast robotics pick-and-place with suction cups is a crucial component in the
current development of automation in logistics (factory lines, e-commerce,
etc.). By "critically fast" we mean the fastest possible movement for
transporting an object such that it does not slip or fall from the suction cup.
The main difficulties are: (i) handling the contact between the suction cup and
the object, which fundamentally involves kinodynamic constraints; and (ii)
doing so at a low computational cost, typically a few hundreds of milliseconds.
To address these difficulties, we propose (a) a model for suction cup contacts,
(b) a procedure to identify the contact stability constraint based on that
model, and (c) a pipeline to parameterize, in a time-optimal manner, arbitrary
geometric paths under the identified contact stability constraint. We
experimentally validate the proposed pipeline on a physical robot system: the
cycle time for a typical pick-and-place task was less than 5 seconds, planning
and execution times included. The full pipeline is released as open-source for
the robotics community.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Robotic manipulation of a rotating chain
This paper considers the problem of manipulating a uniformly rotating chain:
the chain is rotated at a constant angular speed around a fixed axis using a
robotic manipulator. Manipulation is quasi-static in the sense that transitions
are slow enough for the chain to be always in "rotational" equilibrium. The
curve traced by the chain in a rotating plane -- its shape function -- can be
determined by a simple force analysis, yet it possesses complex multi-solutions
behavior typical of non-linear systems. We prove that the configuration space
of the uniformly rotating chain is homeomorphic to a two-dimensional surface
embedded in . Using that representation, we devise a manipulation
strategy for transiting between different rotation modes in a stable and
controlled manner. We demonstrate the strategy on a physical robotic arm
manipulating a rotating chain. Finally, we discuss how the ideas developed here
might find fruitful applications in the study of other flexible objects, such
as elastic rods or concentric tubes.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Time-Optimal Path Tracking via Reachability Analysis
Given a geometric path, the Time-Optimal Path Tracking problem consists in
finding the control strategy to traverse the path time-optimally while
regulating tracking errors. A simple yet effective approach to this problem is
to decompose the controller into two components: (i)~a path controller, which
modulates the parameterization of the desired path in an online manner,
yielding a reference trajectory; and (ii)~a tracking controller, which takes
the reference trajectory and outputs joint torques for tracking. However, there
is one major difficulty: the path controller might not find any feasible
reference trajectory that can be tracked by the tracking controller because of
torque bounds. In turn, this results in degraded tracking performances. Here,
we propose a new path controller that is guaranteed to find feasible reference
trajectories by accounting for possible future perturbations. The main
technical tool underlying the proposed controller is Reachability Analysis, a
new method for analyzing path parameterization problems. Simulations show that
the proposed controller outperforms existing methods.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, ICRA 201
A New Approach to Time-Optimal Path Parameterization based on Reachability Analysis
Time-Optimal Path Parameterization (TOPP) is a well-studied problem in
robotics and has a wide range of applications. There are two main families of
methods to address TOPP: Numerical Integration (NI) and Convex Optimization
(CO). NI-based methods are fast but difficult to implement and suffer from
robustness issues, while CO-based approaches are more robust but at the same
time significantly slower. Here we propose a new approach to TOPP based on
Reachability Analysis (RA). The key insight is to recursively compute reachable
and controllable sets at discretized positions on the path by solving small
Linear Programs (LPs). The resulting algorithm is faster than NI-based methods
and as robust as CO-based ones (100% success rate), as confirmed by extensive
numerical evaluations. Moreover, the proposed approach offers unique additional
benefits: Admissible Velocity Propagation and robustness to parametric
uncertainty can be derived from it in a simple and natural way.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
A Family of Coherence-Based Multi-Microphone Speech Enhancement Systems
This contribution addresses the problem of additive noise reduction in speech picked up by a microphone in a noisy environment. Two systems belonging to the family of coherence-based noise cancellers are presented. Suggested systems have the modular structure using 2 or 4 microphones and suppress non-stationary noises in the range of 4 to 17 dB depending on the chosen structure and noise characteristics. The common properties are acceptable noise suppression, low speech distortion and residual noise
A Genetic Algorithm for Power-Aware Virtual Machine Allocation in Private Cloud
Energy efficiency has become an important measurement of scheduling algorithm
for private cloud. The challenge is trade-off between minimizing of energy
consumption and satisfying Quality of Service (QoS) (e.g. performance or
resource availability on time for reservation request). We consider resource
needs in context of a private cloud system to provide resources for
applications in teaching and researching. In which users request computing
resources for laboratory classes at start times and non-interrupted duration in
some hours in prior. Many previous works are based on migrating techniques to
move online virtual machines (VMs) from low utilization hosts and turn these
hosts off to reduce energy consumption. However, the techniques for migration
of VMs could not use in our case. In this paper, a genetic algorithm for
power-aware in scheduling of resource allocation (GAPA) has been proposed to
solve the static virtual machine allocation problem (SVMAP). Due to limited
resources (i.e. memory) for executing simulation, we created a workload that
contains a sample of one-day timetable of lab hours in our university. We
evaluate the GAPA and a baseline scheduling algorithm (BFD), which sorts list
of virtual machines in start time (i.e. earliest start time first) and using
best-fit decreasing (i.e. least increased power consumption) algorithm, for
solving the same SVMAP. As a result, the GAPA algorithm obtains total energy
consumption is lower than the baseline algorithm on simulated experimentation.Comment: 10 page
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