DocumentCode
1155271
Title
Designing future underwater vehicles: principles and mechanisms of the weakly electric fish
Author
MacIver, Malcolm A. ; Fontaine, Ebraheem ; Burdick, Joel W.
Author_Institution
Appl. Sci. & the Comput. & Neural Syst. Program, California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume
29
Issue
3
fYear
2004
fDate
7/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
651
Lastpage
659
Abstract
Future underwater vehicles will be increasingly called upon to work in cluttered environments and to interact with their surroundings. These vehicles will need sensors that work efficiently at short range and be highly maneuverable at low speed. To obtain insights into principles and mechanisms of low-speed operation in cluttered environments, we examine a fish that excels in this regime, the black ghost knifefish Apteronotus albifrons. This fish hunts in dark or turbid water using a short-range self-generated electric field to sense its surroundings. Coupled with this unique mode of sensing is an unusual ribbon fin propulsion system that confers high multidirectional maneuverability at low speeds. To better understand the relationship between body morphology and common maneuvers of this fish, we utilized an idealized ellipsoidal body model, Kirchhoff´s equations, and an optimal control algorithm for generating trajectories. We present evidence that common fish trajectories are optimal, and that these trajectories complement the sensory abilities of the fish. We also discuss prototypes of the sensing and propulsion systems of the fish with a view to providing alternative approaches for underwater vehicle design where high maneuverability in geometrically complex environments is needed.
Keywords
biosensors; optimal control; remotely operated vehicles; robots; underwater vehicles; Apteronotus albifrons; Kirchhoff equations; active sensing; autonomous underwater vehicles; backward swimming; biologically inspired robotics; biorobotics; black ghost knifefish; body morphology; cluttered environments; electrosensory; fish trajectories; gymnotiform; high multidirectional maneuverability; idealized ellipsoidal body model; optimal control algorithm; propulsion systems; remotely operated vehicles; sensing systems; short-range self-generated electric field; unusual ribbon fin propulsion system; weakly electric fish; Biomedical engineering; Equations; Marine animals; Morphology; Optimal control; Propulsion; Prototypes; Remotely operated vehicles; Robot sensing systems; Underwater vehicles; 65; Active sensing; autonomous underwater vehicles; backward swimming; biologically inspired robotics; biorobotics; electric fish; electrosensory; gymnotiform; knifefish; locomotion; maneuverability; remotely operated vehicles; ribbon fin;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0364-9059
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JOE.2004.833210
Filename
1353418
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