DocumentCode :
171763
Title :
Towards a radio-based swarm navigation system on mars — Key technologies and performance assessment
Author :
Staudinger, Emanuel ; Siwei Zhang ; Dammann, Armin ; Chen Zhu
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Commun. & Navig., German Aerosp. Center (DLR), Wessling, Germany
fYear :
2014
fDate :
30-31 Oct. 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
7
Abstract :
Robust localization and navigation are essential for the success of robotic exploration, especially in remote and harsh environments. Navigation in feature-less areas becomes challenging when laser scanners or cameras can not provide relative or global localization. Moreover, complementary positioning solutions like a Global Navigation Satellite System or mobile radio based localization are not available on Mars. State of the art systems focus on single partial autonomous robots for specific scientific tasks, e.g., the Curiosity rover. We propose autonomous robotic swarms as promising approach to explore the Valles Marineris canyon system. Our swarm navigation uses relative radio positioning and return-to-base navigation, exploiting wireless signals in a smart fashion and aims to complement existing laser/camera based solutions. It employs a hybrid time-division access and frequency-division multiple access scheme with interleaved round-trip delay ranging measurements. Ranging measurements are online processed in a distributed particle filter with local, partial connectivity to surrounding swarm elements. Furthermore, our swarm navigation is jointly designed for localization and communication. Thus, the very same wireless links used for ranging are simultaneously used for high-rate communications among swarm elements. The performance of our approach is evaluated through simulations and with real measurement data obtained from our ranging prototype. We achieve sub-meter accuracy for anchor-free localization which highlights our promising and applicable solution for robotic swarms.
Keywords :
Mars; frequency division multiple access; optical scanners; particle filtering (numerical methods); radionavigation; robots; time division multiple access; Curiosity rover; Global Navigation Satellite System; Mars; Valles Marineris canyon system; anchor-free localization; autonomous robotic swarms; cameras; frequency-division multiple access scheme; high-rate communications; laser scanners; mobile radio based localization; particle filter; radio positioning; radio-based swarm navigation system; ranging measurements; return-to-base navigation; robotic exploration; time-division access scheme; wireless signals; Accuracy; Distance measurement; Mars; OFDM; Radio navigation; Synchronization; Time division multiple access;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Wireless for Space and Extreme Environments (WiSEE), 2014 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Noordwijk
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/WiSEE.2014.6973083
Filename :
6973083
Link To Document :
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