• DocumentCode
    1093
  • Title

    Mapping of Translating, Rotating Icebergs With an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle

  • Author

    Kimball, Peter W. ; Rock, Stephen M.

  • Author_Institution
    Appl. Ocean Phys. & Eng. Dept., Woods Hole Oceanogr. Instn., Woods Hole, MA, USA
  • Volume
    40
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Jan. 2015
  • Firstpage
    196
  • Lastpage
    208
  • Abstract
    This paper presents a method for mapping translating, rotating icebergs with an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV). To map an iceberg, the AUV first circumnavigates it, collecting multibeam sonar ranges and iceberg-relative Doppler sonar velocities from the submerged iceberg surface. The primary challenge is then to estimate the trajectory of the mapping vehicle in a noninertial reference frame attached to the moving iceberg. The collected multibeam ranges may then be projected from this trajectory to form a map of the iceberg´s submerged surface. The approach of the method involves identifying the iceberg-frame locations of all the Doppler sonar measurements made during circumnavigation, allowing the AUV´s iceberg-relative trajectory to be computed from those locations. The measurement locations are estimated simultaneously with the trajectory of the iceberg to be most consistent with the inertial-space positions, inertial-space velocities, distances between points on the iceberg surface as measured by the Doppler sonar, and alignment of multibeam ranges measured at the beginning and end of the circumnavigation. The measurements depend nonlinearly on the modeled positions and iceberg trajectory, and the paper presents a solution formulation that deals efficiently with the nonlinearity. By incorporating iceberg-relative vehicle velocity into the estimation, the method achieves two significant advances beyond prior work by the authors. First, and most significantly, the method adds ice-relative vehicle velocity measurements (e.g., using a Doppler velocity logger). This makes the method robust to common vehicle inertial navigation errors. Second, inclusion of iceberg-relative vehicle velocity data allows for the identification of a more general model of iceberg trajectory, making the method robust to changes in iceberg translation and rotation rates. Currently, no iceberg circumnavigation data sets are available that include iceberg-relative velocity from Doppler - onar. However, this paper includes results from simulated free-drifting icebergs, and experimental results from an AUV seafloor mapping dive. The simulation data provide a moving iceberg testbed with known ground truth for the mapping results. The seafloor data provide a qualitative verification that the method works with real vehicle data.
  • Keywords
    autonomous underwater vehicles; oceanographic techniques; sea ice; terrain mapping; AUV iceberg-relative trajectory; AUV seafloor mapping; Doppler sonar; Doppler sonar measurements; autonomous underwater vehicle; free-drifting icebergs; ice-relative vehicle velocity measurements; iceberg circumnavigation data sets; iceberg-frame locations; iceberg-relative Doppler sonar velocities; iceberg-relative vehicle velocity; inertial-space positions; inertial-space velocities; mapping vehicle trajectory; multibeam sonar ranges; noninertial reference frame; rotating iceberg mapping; submerged iceberg surface; translating iceberg mapping; Position measurement; Sea measurements; Sonar; Splines (mathematics); Trajectory; Vehicles; Velocity measurement; Estimation; ice; marine navigation; marine vehicles; motion estimation; terrain mapping;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0364-9059
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JOE.2014.2300396
  • Filename
    6746684