DocumentCode
151894
Title
Designing a spatially aware, automated quadcopter using an Android control system
Author
Pearce, Carolyn ; Guckenberg, Margaret ; Holden, Bobby ; Leach, Andrew ; Hughes, Robert ; Xie, Chao ; Hassett, Meredith ; Adderley, Andrew ; Barnes, L.E. ; Sherriff, Mark ; Lewin, G.C.
fYear
2014
fDate
25-25 April 2014
Firstpage
23
Lastpage
28
Abstract
Intelligence gathering is a critical component of military operations. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have become an increasingly useful tool due to their surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities. However, the use of many of these vehicles is limited to outdoor environments because of their size and reliance on Global Positioning Satellites (GPS). Knowledge of indoor environments is important so that the risk of entering an unsafe or unknown building can be minimized. This paper describes the development of a spatially aware, autonomous quadcopter that uses an Android control system and functions indoors. The system consists of a laser rangefinder for sensory input, a IOIO microcontroller for data communication across platforms, an autopilot system (APM) for flight control, and an Android phone for mission control. The Android Control and Sensor System (ACSS) is currently being developed by the Department of Defense (DOD), MITRE, and academic partners, and will be integrated into the solution. To be considered autonomous, the quadcopter must be able to make a map from the data provided by the laser rangefinder, determine its own location and position in that map, and then execute a set of navigational commands from the Android control system. The success of this project is measured by the system´s ability to travel autonomously while simultaneously creating a map and being aware of its location.
Keywords
Android (operating system); SLAM (robots); autonomous aerial vehicles; control engineering computing; helicopters; military aircraft; military computing; mobile computing; mobile robots; path planning; ACSS; APM; Android control and sensor system; DOD; Department of Defense; GPS; Global Positioning Satellites; IOIO microcontroller; UAV reconnaissance capabilities; UAV surveillance capabilities; autopilot system; flight control; indoor environments; intelligence gathering; laser rangefinder; military operations; outdoor environments; spatially aware automated quadcopter; unmanned aerial vehicles; Acoustics; Global Positioning System; Laser radar; Simultaneous localization and mapping; Smart phones; android; localization; mapping; navigation; quadcopter;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Systems and Information Engineering Design Symposium (SIEDS), 2014
Conference_Location
Charlottesville, VA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-4837-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SIEDS.2014.6829921
Filename
6829921
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