DocumentCode :
251590
Title :
Particle computation: Designing worlds to control robot swarms with only global signals
Author :
Becker, A. ; Demaine, Erik D. ; Fekete, Sandor P. ; McLurkin, James
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Rice Univ., Houston, TX, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
May 31 2014-June 7 2014
Firstpage :
6751
Lastpage :
6756
Abstract :
Micro- and nanorobots are often controlled by global input signals, such as an electromagnetic or gravitational field. These fields move each robot maximally until it hits a stationary obstacle or another stationary robot. This paper investigates 2D motion-planning complexity for large swarms of simple mobile robots (such as bacteria, sensors, or smart building material). In previous work we proved it is NP-hard to decide whether a given initial configuration can be transformed into a desired target configuration; in this paper we prove a stronger result: the problem of finding an optimal control sequence is PSPACE-complete. On the positive side, we show we can build useful systems by designing obstacles. We present a reconfigurable hardware platform and demonstrate how to form arbitrary permutations and build a compact absolute encoder. We then take the same platform and use dual-rail logic to build a universal logic gate that concurrently evaluates AND, NAND, NOR and OR operations. Using many of these gates and appropriate interconnects we can evaluate any logical expression.
Keywords :
collision avoidance; computational complexity; control system synthesis; logic gates; microrobots; multi-robot systems; optimal control; 2D motion planning complexity; AND operation; NAND operation; NOR operation; NP-hard problem; OR operation; PSPACE-complete problem; dual-rail logic; electromagnetic field; global input signals; gravitational field; logical expression; microrobots; nanorobots; obstacle design; optimal control sequence; particle computation; reconfigurable hardware platform; robot swarms control; stationary obstacle; stationary robot; universal logic gate; Clocks; Complexity theory; Hardware; Logic gates; Prototypes; Robot sensing systems;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2014 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Hong Kong
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICRA.2014.6907856
Filename :
6907856
Link To Document :
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