DocumentCode
1939791
Title
Mapping planetary caves with an autonomous, heterogeneous robot team
Author
Husain, Ammar ; Jones, Heather ; Kannan, Balajee ; Wong, Uland ; Pimentel, Tiago ; Tang, Sarah ; Daftry, Shreyansh ; Huber, Steven ; Whittaker, William L.
Author_Institution
Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
2-9 March 2013
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
13
Abstract
Caves on other planetary bodies offer sheltered habitat for future human explorers and numerous clues to a planet´s past for scientists. While recent orbital imagery provides exciting new details about cave entrances on the Moon and Mars, the interiors of these caves are still unknown and not observable from orbit. Multi-robot teams offer unique solutions for exploration and modeling subsurface voids during precursor missions. Robot teams that are diverse in terms of size, mobility, sensing, and capability can provide great advantages, but this diversity, coupled with inherently distinct low-level behavior architectures, makes coordination a challenge. This paper presents a framework that consists of an autonomous frontier and capability-based task generator, a distributed market-based strategy for coordinating and allocating tasks to the different team members, and a communication paradigm for seamless interaction between the different robots in the system. Robots have different sensors, (in the representative robot team used for testing: 2D mapping sensors, 3D modeling sensors, or no exteroceptive sensors), and varying levels of mobility. Tasks are generated to explore, model, and take science samples. Based on an individual robot´s capability and associated cost for executing a generated task, a robot is autonomously selected for task execution. The robots create coarse online maps and store collected data for high resolution offline modeling. The coordination approach has been field tested at a mock cave site with highly-unstructured natural terrain, as well as an outdoor patio area. Initial results are promising for applicability of the proposed multi-robot framework to exploration and modeling of planetary caves.
Keywords
Mobile robots; Moon; Planning; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Aerospace Conference, 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location
Big Sky, MT
ISSN
1095-323X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1812-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AERO.2013.6497363
Filename
6497363
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