DocumentCode
663607
Title
Design and control of a spherical omnidirectional blimp
Author
Burri, M. ; Gasser, L. ; Kach, M. ; Krebs, Manuel ; Laube, Spencer ; Ledergerber, A. ; Meier, Daniel ; Michaud, R. ; Mosimann, Lukas ; Muri, L. ; Ruch, C. ; Schaffner, A. ; Vuilliomenet, N. ; Weichart, J. ; Rudin, Konrad ; Leutenegger, Stefan ; Alonso-Mor
Author_Institution
Autonomous Syst. Lab., ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
fYear
2013
fDate
3-7 Nov. 2013
Firstpage
1873
Lastpage
1879
Abstract
This paper presents Skye, a novel blimp design. Skye is a helium-filled sphere of diameter 2.7m with a strong inelastic outer hull and an impermeable elastic inner hull. Four tetrahedrally-arranged actuation units (AU) are mounted on the hull for locomotion, with each AU having a thruster which can be rotated around a radial axis through the sphere center. This design provides redundant control in the six degrees of freedom of motion, and Skye is able to move omnidirectionally and to rotate around any axis. A multi-camera module is also mounted on the hull for capture of aerial imagery or live video stream according to an `eyeball´ concept - the camera module is not itself actuated, but the whole blimp is rotated in order to obtain a desired camera view. Skye is safe for use near people - the double hull minimizes the likelihood of rupture on an unwanted collision; the propellers are covered by grills to prevent accidental contact; and the blimp is near neutral buoyancy so that it makes only a light impact on contact and can be readily nudged away. The system is portable and deployable by a single operator - the electronics, AUs, and camera unit are mounted externally and are detachable from the hull during transport; operator control is via an intuitive touchpad interface. The motivating application is in entertainment robotics. Skye has a varied motion vocabulary such as swooping and bobbing, plus internal LEDs for visual effect. Computer vision enables interaction with an audience. Experimental results show dexterous maneuvers in indoor and outdoor environments, and non-dangerous impacts between the blimp and humans.
Keywords
airships; human-robot interaction; image sensors; robot vision; telerobotics; touch sensitive screens; AU; Skye; accidental contact; aerial imagery; camera unit; computer vision; dexterous maneuvers; double hull; entertainment robotics; eyeball concept; helium-filled sphere; impermeable elastic inner hull; inelastic outer hull; internal LED; intuitive touchpad interface; live video stream; motion vocabulary; multicamera module; near neutral buoyancy; sphere center; spherical omnidirectional blimp control; spherical omnidirectional blimp design; tetrahedrally-arranged actuation units; unwanted collision; visual effect; Angular velocity; Cameras; DC motors; Force; Gold; Mathematical model; Propellers;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), 2013 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Conference_Location
Tokyo
ISSN
2153-0858
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IROS.2013.6696604
Filename
6696604
Link To Document