Motivated by applications in intelligent highway systems, the paper studies
the problem of guiding mobile agents in a one-dimensional formation to their
desired relative positions. Only coarse information is used which is
communicated from a guidance system that monitors in real time the agents'
motions. The desired relative positions are defined by the given distance
constraints between the agents under which the overall formation is rigid in
shape and thus admits locally a unique realization. It is shown that even when
the guidance system can only transmit at most four bits of information to each
agent, it is still possible to design control laws to guide the agents to their
desired positions. We further delineate the thin set of initial conditions for
which the proposed control law may fail using the example of a three-agent
formation. Tools from non-smooth analysis are utilized for the convergence
analysis.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure