3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots

Rough terrain robotics is a fast evolving field of research and a lot of effort is deployed towards enabling a greater level of autonomy for outdoor vehicles. This book demonstrates how the accuracy of 3D position tracking can be improved by considering rover locomotion in rough terrain as a holisti...

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Main Author: Lamon, Pierre
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/25617
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Institution: Vietnam National University, Hanoi
Language: English
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spelling oai:112.137.131.14:VNU_123-256172020-05-13T01:40:54Z 3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots Lamon, Pierre Engineering Rough terrain robotics is a fast evolving field of research and a lot of effort is deployed towards enabling a greater level of autonomy for outdoor vehicles. This book demonstrates how the accuracy of 3D position tracking can be improved by considering rover locomotion in rough terrain as a holistic problem. Although the selection of appropriate sensors is crucial to accurately track the rover’s position, it is not the only aspect to consider. Indeed, the use of an unadapted locomotion concept severely affects the signal to noise ratio of the sensors, which leads to poor motion estimates. In this work, a mechanical structure allowing smooth motion across obstacles with limited wheel slip is used. In particular, it enables the use of odometry and inertial sensors to improve the position estimation in rough terrain. A method for computing 3D motion increments based on the wheel encoders and chassis state sensors is developed. Because it accounts for the kinematics of the rover, this method provides better results than the standard approach. To further improve the accuracy of the position tracking and the rover’s climbing performance, a controller minimizing wheel slip is developed. The algorithm runs online and can be adapted to any kind of passive wheeled rover. Finally, sensor fusion using 3D-Odometry, inertial sensors and visual motion estimation based on stereovision is presented. The experimental results demonstrate how each sensor contributes to increase the accuracy and robustness of the 3D position estimation. 2017-04-10T07:38:19Z 2017-04-10T07:38:19Z 2008 Book 978-3-540-78286-5 http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/25617 10.1007/978-3-540-78287-2 en ©2008 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 113 p. application/pdf
institution Vietnam National University, Hanoi
building VNU Library & Information Center
country Vietnam
collection VNU Digital Repository
language English
topic Engineering
spellingShingle Engineering
Lamon, Pierre
3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots
description Rough terrain robotics is a fast evolving field of research and a lot of effort is deployed towards enabling a greater level of autonomy for outdoor vehicles. This book demonstrates how the accuracy of 3D position tracking can be improved by considering rover locomotion in rough terrain as a holistic problem. Although the selection of appropriate sensors is crucial to accurately track the rover’s position, it is not the only aspect to consider. Indeed, the use of an unadapted locomotion concept severely affects the signal to noise ratio of the sensors, which leads to poor motion estimates. In this work, a mechanical structure allowing smooth motion across obstacles with limited wheel slip is used. In particular, it enables the use of odometry and inertial sensors to improve the position estimation in rough terrain. A method for computing 3D motion increments based on the wheel encoders and chassis state sensors is developed. Because it accounts for the kinematics of the rover, this method provides better results than the standard approach. To further improve the accuracy of the position tracking and the rover’s climbing performance, a controller minimizing wheel slip is developed. The algorithm runs online and can be adapted to any kind of passive wheeled rover. Finally, sensor fusion using 3D-Odometry, inertial sensors and visual motion estimation based on stereovision is presented. The experimental results demonstrate how each sensor contributes to increase the accuracy and robustness of the 3D position estimation.
format Book
author Lamon, Pierre
author_facet Lamon, Pierre
author_sort Lamon, Pierre
title 3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots
title_short 3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots
title_full 3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots
title_fullStr 3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots
title_full_unstemmed 3D-Position Tracking and Control for All-Terrain Robots
title_sort 3d-position tracking and control for all-terrain robots
publishDate 2017
url http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/25617
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