Title :
A behavior-based planning strategy for deep-sea hydrothermal plume tracing with autonomous underwater vehicles
Author :
Yu Tian ; Aiqun Zhang ; Wei Li ; Jiancheng Yu ; Yiping Li ; Junbao Zeng
Author_Institution :
State Key Lab. of Robot., Shenyang Inst. of Autom., Shenyang, China
Abstract :
Deep-sea hydrothermal plume tracing capability is important for autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) to efficiently perform hydrothermal vents prospecting missions. This paper proposes a behavior-based planning strategy that aims to enable an AUV to plan its on-line behaviors and path with real-time sensor information to track a hydrothermal plume to a hydrothermal vent and to localize the vent. The proposed strategy is based on the moth-inspired chemical plume tracing strategy, and comprises two components, a hydrothermal non-buoyant plume tracing strategy to track a hydrothermal non-buoyant plume in two dimensions to the top terminal of a hydrothermal buoyant plume, and a hydrothermal buoyant plume tracing strategy to track a hydrothermal buoyant plume in three dimensions to a hydrothermal vent and localize the vent. Both of the non-buoyant plume and buoyant plume tracing strategies are composed of three behavior types: Maintain-Plume, Reacquire-Plume, and Declare-Source. Implementation of the behaviors in the strategy considers the AUV dynamics and the features of hydrothermal plumes. The proposed hydrothermal plume tracing strategy is implemented on a computer simulation environment in which the simulated plume reflects the hydrothermal plume features, and the simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed strategy.
Keywords :
geophysical prospecting; oceanographic techniques; seafloor phenomena; Declare-Source behavior; Maintain-Plume behavior; Reacquire-Plume behavior; autonomous underwater vehicles; behavior-based planning strategy; computer simulation environment; deep-sea hydrothermal plume tracing; hydrothermal nonbuoyant plume tracing strategy; hydrothermal plume tracing strategy; hydrothermal vents prospecting missions; moth-inspired chemical plume tracing strategy; real-time sensor information; Chemicals; Oceans; Planning; Real-time systems; Thermal pollution; Tracking; Vents; autonomous underwater vehicle; behavior-based planning; bio-inspired robot; chemical plume tracing; hydrothermal exploration;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2014 - TAIPEI
Conference_Location :
Taipei
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3645-8
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS-TAIPEI.2014.6964302