Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace
Path planning is important for developing an Unmanned Aerial System in the context of an urban airspace, to ensure safety and efficiency for operations at lower altitudes. Taking into account safety constraints in such an airspace, path planning needs to generate an optimal travel route, while maint...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-788642023-03-04T18:56:13Z Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace Hoang, Huong Giang Sameer Alam School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Mark Hansen Engineering::Aeronautical engineering Path planning is important for developing an Unmanned Aerial System in the context of an urban airspace, to ensure safety and efficiency for operations at lower altitudes. Taking into account safety constraints in such an airspace, path planning needs to generate an optimal travel route, while maintaining sufficient minimum separation from urban infrastructure. The Rapidly-exploring Random Tree (RRT) algorithm is used for path planning in this project due to its wide application in robotic motion planning, and strength in multi-robot collision avoidance. This algorithm computes the trajectory from an initial to a desired end location by creating a collision-free path constructed from nodes and links. This project involves modelling the available urban airspace in San Francisco at several different altitudes, and deterministic routing for a single drone by implementing RRT path planning on each altitude layer. The objective is to generate a collision-free path around buildings, and determine the optimal cruise altitude to minimise energy cost. Subsequently, the performance of RRT is compared with a different path planning approach, namely the Fast Marching Method (FMM). A comparison of RRT and FMM can provide some insight into the differences between using a sampling-based and a grid-based approach to path planning respectively. Bachelor of Engineering (Aerospace Engineering) 2019-09-02T01:20:30Z 2019-09-02T01:20:30Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78864 en Nanyang Technological University 62 p. application/pdf |
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Path planning is important for developing an Unmanned Aerial System in the context of an urban airspace, to ensure safety and efficiency for operations at lower altitudes. Taking into account safety constraints in such an airspace, path planning needs to generate an optimal travel route, while maintaining sufficient minimum separation from urban infrastructure. The Rapidly-exploring Random Tree (RRT) algorithm is used for path planning in this project due to its wide application in robotic motion planning, and strength in multi-robot collision avoidance. This algorithm computes the trajectory from an initial to a desired end location by creating a collision-free path constructed from nodes and links. This project involves modelling the available urban airspace in San Francisco at several different altitudes, and deterministic routing for a single drone by implementing RRT path planning on each altitude layer. The objective is to generate a collision-free path around buildings, and determine the optimal cruise altitude to minimise energy cost. Subsequently, the performance of RRT is compared with a different path planning approach, namely the Fast Marching Method (FMM). A comparison of RRT and FMM can provide some insight into the differences between using a sampling-based and a grid-based approach to path planning respectively. |
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Sameer Alam |
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Sameer Alam Hoang, Huong Giang |
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Final Year Project |
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Hoang, Huong Giang |
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Hoang, Huong Giang |
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Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace |
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Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace |
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Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace |
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Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace |
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Single drone path planning in complex urban airspace |
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single drone path planning in complex urban airspace |
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2019 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78864 |
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