87 research outputs found
MeROS: SysML-based Metamodel for ROS-based Systems
The complexity of today's robot control systems implies difficulty in
developing them efficiently and reliably. Systems engineering (SE) and
frameworks come to help. The framework metamodels are needed to support the
standardisation and correctness of the created application models. Although the
use of frameworks is widespread nowadays, for the most popular of them, Robot
Operating System (ROS) version 1, a contemporary metamodel, has been missing so
far. This article proposes a new metamodel for ROS (MeROS), which addresses
both the running system and developer workspace. For compatibility with the
latest versions of ROS 1, the metamodel includes the latest ROS 1 concepts such
as nodelet, action, and metapackage. An essential addition to the original ROS
concepts is the grouping concepts, which provide an opportunity to illustrate
the decomposition of the system, as well as varying degrees of detail in its
presentation. The metamodel is derived from the requirements and then verified
on the practical example of the Rico assistive robot. The matter is described
in the SysML language, supported by standard development tools to conduct
projects in the spirit of SE
SPRING BASED ON FLAT PERMANENT MAGNETS: DESIGN, ANALYSIS AND USE IN VARIABLE STIFFNESS ACTUATOR
Modern robot applications benefit from including variable stiffness actuators (VSA) in the kinematic chain. In this paper, we focus on VSA utilizing a magnetic spring made of two coaxial rings divided into alternately magnetized sections. The torque generated between the rings is opposite to the angular deflection from equilibrium and its value increases as the deflection grows – within a specific range of angles that we call a stable range. Beyond the stable range, the spring exhibits negative stiffness what causes problems with prediction and control. In order to avoid it, it is convenient to operate within a narrower range of angles that we call a safe range. The magnetic springs proposed so far utilize few pairs of arc magnets, and their safe ranges are significantly smaller than the stable ones. In order to broaden the safe range, we propose a different design of the magnetic spring, which is composed of flat magnets, as well as a new arrangement of VSA (called ATTRACTOR) utilizing the proposed spring. Correctness and usability of the concept are verified in FEM analyses and experiments performed on constructed VSA, which led to formulating models of the magnetic spring. The results show that choosing flat magnets over arc ones enables shaping spring characteristics in a way that broadens the safe range. An additional benefit is lowered cost, and the main disadvantage is a reduced maximal torque that the spring is capable of transmitting. The whole VSA can be perceived as promising construction for further development, miniaturization and possible application in modern robotic mechanisms
Processes of removing zinc from water using zero-valent iron
Zero-valent iron has received considerable attention for its potential application in the removal of heavy metals from water. This paper considers the possibility of removal of zinc ions from water by causing precipitates to form on the surface of iron. The chemical states and the atomic concentrations of solids which have formed on the surface of zero-valent iron as well as the type of the deposited polycrystalline substances have been analyzed with the use of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD), respectively. The BET surface area, the pH at point of zero charge (pHPZC), the ORP of the solutions, and the pH and chemical concentrations in the solutions have also been measured. Furthermore, the paper also considers the possibility of release of zinc from the precipitates to demineralised water in changing physicochemical and chemical conditions. In a wide range of pH values, Zn x Fe3 − x O4 (where x ≤ 1) was the main compound resulting from the removal of zinc in ionic form from water. In neutral and alkaline conditions, the adsorption occurred as an additional process
A photometric and spectroscopic study of WW And - an Algol-type, long period binary system with an accretion disc
We have analyzed the available spectra of WW And and for the first time
obtained a reasonably well defined radial velocity curve of the primary star.
Combined with the available radial velocity curve of the secondary component,
these data led to the first determination of the spectroscopic mass ratio of
the system at q-spec = 0.16 +/- 0.03. We also determined the radius of the
accretion disc from analysis of the double-peaked H-alpha emission lines. Our
new, high-precision, Johnson VRI and the previously available Stromgren vby
light curves were modelled with stellar and accretion disc models. A consistent
model for WW And - a semidetached system harbouring an accretion disc which is
optically thick in its inner region, but optically thin in the outer parts -
agrees well with both spectroscopic and photometric data.Comment: Accepted by New Astronom
Determination of physical parameters of the eclipsing binary V729 Cyg
We report new BVRI photometric observations of an eclipsing, massive binary V729 Cyg taken between 2008 and 2011. We performed light curve modeling of the new data and those available in the literature using the Wilson-Devinney code. The best fit was obtained for a contact configuration, similarly to results derived previously by other investigators. However, a huge temperature difference of about 10 000K - 12 000K was derived, inconsistent with theoretical calculations. Ruling out a possibility of V729 Cyg being a semi-detached system harbouring an accretion disk, we determined physical parameters of components
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