DocumentCode
2949543
Title
Visual odometry on the Mars Exploration Rovers
Author
Cheng, Yang ; Maimone, Mark ; Matthies, Larry
Author_Institution
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume
1
fYear
2005
fDate
10-12 Oct. 2005
Firstpage
903
Abstract
NASA\´s Mars Exploration Rovers (MER) was designed to traverse in Viking Lander-I style terrains: mostly flat, with many small non-obstacle rocks and occasional obstacles. During actual operations in such terrains, onboard position estimates derived solely from the onboard inertial measurement unit and wheel encoder-based odometry achieved well within the design goal of at most 10% error. However, MER vehicles were also driven along slippery slopes tilted as high as 31 degrees. In such conditions an additional capability was employed to maintain a sufficiently accurate onboard position estimate: visual odometry. The MER visual odometry system comprises onboard software for comparing stereo pairs taken by the pointable mast-mounted 45 degree FOV navigation cameras (NAV-CAMs). The system computes an update to the 6-DOF rover pose (x, y, z, roll, pitch, yaw) by tracking the motion of autonomously-selected "interesting" terrain features between two pairs of stereo images, in both 2D pixel and 3D world coordinates. A maximum likelihood estimator is applied to the computed 3D offsets to produce a final, corrected estimate of vehicle motion between the two pairs. In this paper we describe the visual odometry algorithm used on the Mars Exploration Rovers, and summarize its results from the first year of operations on Mars.
Keywords
aerospace computing; aerospace robotics; mobile robots; motion estimation; planetary rovers; position measurement; robot vision; stereo image processing; Mars Exploration Rovers; inertial measurement unit; motion Estimation; navigation cameras; onboard position estimates; stereo images; visual odometry; wheel encoder-based odometry; Cameras; Mars; Measurement units; Motion estimation; Navigation; Pixel; Software systems; Tracking; Vehicle driving; Wheels; Egomotion; MER; Mars Exploration Rover; Motion Estimation; Visual Odometry;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, 2005 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9298-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSMC.2005.1571261
Filename
1571261
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