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Geodesic Problems for Mobile Robots
Chitsaz, Hamid Reza
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/11418
Description
- Title
- Geodesic Problems for Mobile Robots
- Author(s)
- Chitsaz, Hamid Reza
- Issue Date
- 2008-01
- Keyword(s)
- robotics
- Abstract
- As mobile robots operate with limited resources which they carry onboard in large obstructed environments, their success is dependent on how efficiently they move while they avoid collision with obstacles and other robots. Moving optimally is the ultimate efficiency a mobile robot can achieve. Therefore, planning optimal motions and devising optimal coordination strategies are two important and challenging fundamental problems in mobile robotics, which have received significant attention in the last couple of decades. Both of those problems can be reduced to shortest path, or equivalently {\em geodesic}, problems in appropriate geometric settings. Geodesic problems have been studied in two disciplines: 1) optimal control theory, and 2) computational geometry. Optimal control theory has focused on the differential constraints of robotic systems, while computational geometry has focused on shortest path problems in an environment with obstacles. Optimal control theory has historically disregarded obstacles in the environment, and computational geometry does not consider dynamics of the robotic system, various optimality criteria, or multi-objective optimality. While each discipline has its own powerful tools to address some geodesic problems, there is a large class of problems that cannot be solved using existing algorithms and methods. We introduce a unified approach that is inspired by main results in both disciplines. In this dissertation, we demonstrate our technique, which combines the celebrated Pontryagin Maximum Principle from optimal control theory with visibility graph methods from computational geometry, by solving three geodesic problems for mobile robots: 1) geodesics for the differential drive among obstacles, 2) geodesics for a kinematic airplane, and 3) optimal coordination of two polygonal robots moving on a predetermined network of paths. We consider the differential drive because it is ubiquitous in mobile robotics. To obtain a well-defined notion of shortest, the total amount of wheel rotation is optimized. We analytically characterize minimum wheel-rotation trajectories in the absence of obstacles, and identify 52 different minimum wheel-rotation trajectories. In the presence of obstacles, every minimum wheel-rotation trajectory is composed of two kinds of subtrajectories: on the boundary of obstacles and in the interior of collision-free space. We prove those subtrajectories that lie in the interior of collision-free space are tangent to the obstacles at both ends. The bitangency condition yields a \emph{nonholonomic bitangency graph} which is a network of collision-free trajectories in which the solution is sought. In general, our nonholonomic bitangency graph is a 2-dimensional subset of the 3-dimensional configuration space of the robot. Therefore, further optimization or a continuous search may be required to answer queries. However if obstacles are circular and far enough from one another, the graph is a 1-dimensional subset of the configuration space and any graph search algorithm, such as Dijkstra's algorithm, extracts the solution. In the second problem, we introduce a new kinematic airplane model. Our airplane is a natural extention of the Dubins car \cite{Dub57}, and extends it with an additional configuration variable for the altitude. We use the Pontryagin Maximum Principle to analytically characterize geodesics for it. To obtain a notion of shortest, time is optimized. Finally, we present an algorithm for computing optimal coordination of two polygonal robots without differential constraints. Each robot has a reference point that must lie on a network of paths called a roadmap. Each robot wants to move from its given initial location to its goal location without colliding with the other one. Rather than impose an a priori cost scalarization for choosing the best combined motion, we consider finding motions whose cost vectors are Pareto-optimal. Pareto-optimal coordination strategies are the ones for which there exists no strategy that would be better for both robots. The problem is equivalent to computing geodesics in the coordination space which is the Cartesian product of the roadmap with itself. We extend visibility graphs to solve the problem. If the roadmap is acyclic, then our algorithm has O(mn^2\log n) time complexity, in which m is the number of paths in the roadmap, and n is the number of coordination space vertices. For cyclic roadmaps, our algorithm computes solutions in time O(2^{5\alpha}m^{1+5\alpha} n^2 \log(m^{2\alpha}n)), in which \alpha = 1+\lceil (5\ell+r)/b \rceil where \ell is total length of the roadmap, r is total length of coordination space obstacle boundary, and b is the length of the shortest edge in the roadmap.
- Type of Resource
- text
- Permalink
- http://hdl.handle.net/2142/11418
- Copyright and License Information
- You are granted permission for the non-commercial reproduction, distribution, display, and performance of this technical report in any format, BUT this permission is only for a period of 45 (forty-five) days from the most recent time that you verified that this technical report is still available from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Computer Science Department under terms that include this permission. All other rights are reserved by the author(s).
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