Cooperative Pose Estimation in a Robotic Swarm: Framework, Simulation and Experimental Results

Abstract

Swarm robotics has gained an increasing attention in applications like extraterrestrial exploration and disaster management, due to the ability of simultaneously observing at different locations and avoiding a single point of failure. In order to operate autonomously, robots in a swarm need to know their precise poses, including their positions, velocities and orientations. When external navigation infrastructures like the global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) are not ubiquitously accessible, the swarm of robots need to rely on internal measurements to estimate their poses. In this paper, we propose a cooperative 3D pose estimation framework, based on the insights of sensor characteristics that we gained from outdoor swarm navigation experiments. A decentralized particle filter (DPF) operates on each robot to estimate its pose via fusing radio-based ranging, inertial sensor data, control commands and the pose estimates of its neighbors. This framework is integrated in the swarm navigation ecosystem developed at the German Aerospace Center (DLR), and is unified for both simulations and experiments

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