Egospace Motion Planning Representations for Micro Air Vehicles

Author: Fragoso, Anthony Thomas

Year: 2018

Degree: Dissertation (Ph.D.)

Advisor: Murray, Richard M.

Committee Members: McKeon, Beverley J.; Chung, Soon-Jo; Murray, Richard M.; Matthies, Larry H.

Option: Aeronautics

DOI: 10.7907/Z9GX48RJ

Abstract

Navigation of micro air vehicles (MAVs) in unknown environments is a complex sensing and trajectory generation task, particularly at high velocities. In this work, we introduce an efficient sense-and-avoid pipeline that compactly represents range measurements from multiple sensors, trajectory generation, and motion planning in a 2.5–dimensional projective data structure called an egospace representation. Egospace coordinates generalize depth image obstacle representations and are a particularly convenient choice for configuration flat mobile robots, which are differentially flat in their configuration variables and include a number of commonly used MAV plant models. After characterizing egospace obstacle avoidance for robots with trivial dynamics and establishing limits on applicability and performance, we generalize to motion planning over full configuration flat dynamics using motion primitives expressed directly in egospace coordinates. In comparison to approaches based on world coordinates, egospace uses the natural sensor geometry to combine the benefits of a multi-resolution and multi-sensor representation architecture into a single simple and efficient layer. We also present an experimental implementation, based on perception with stereo vision and an egocylinder obstacle representation, that demonstrates the specialization of our theoretical results to particular mission scenarios. The natural pixel parameterization of the egocylinder is used to quickly identify dynamically feasible maneuvers onto radial paths, expressed directly in egocylinder coordinates, that enable finely detailed planning at extreme ranges within milliseconds. We have implemented our obstacle avoidance pipeline with an Asctec Pelican quadcopter, and demonstrate the efficiency of our approach experimentally with a set of challenging field scenarios. The scalability potential of our system is discussed in terms of sensor horizon, actuation, and computational limitations and the speed limits that each imposes, and its generality to more challenging environments with multiple moving obstacles is developed as an immediate extension to the static framework.

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