Title :
A State Observation Technique for Highly Compressed Source Coding of Autonomous Underwater Vehicle Position
Author :
Schneider, T. ; Schmidt, Heidemarie
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
In this paper, a novel technique is presented for using state observers in conjunction with an entropy source encoder to enable highly compressed telemetry of autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) position vectors. In this work, both the sending vehicle and receiving vehicle or human operator are equipped with a shared real-time simulation of the sender´s state based on the prior transmitted positions. Thus, only the innovation between the sender´s actual state and the shared state need be sent over the link, such as a very low throughput acoustic modem. The distribution of this innovation can be modeled a priori or assembled adaptively. This distribution is then paired with an arithmetic entropy encoder, producing a very low cost representation of the vehicle´s position vector. This system was analyzed on experimental data from the GLINT10 and AGAVE07 expeditions involving two different classes of AUVs performing a diverse number of maneuvers, and implemented on a fielded vehicle in the MBAT12 experiment. Using an adaptive probability distribution in combination with either of two state observer models, greater than 90% compression, relative to a 32-b integer baseline, was achieved.
Keywords :
autonomous underwater vehicles; radionavigation; source coding; underwater acoustic communication; AGAVE07 expedition; GLINT10 expedition; MBAT12 experiment; adaptive probability distribution; autonomous underwater vehicle position; entropy source encoder; highly compressed source coding; highly compressed telemetry; receiving vehicle; sending vehicle; state observation technique; very low throughput acoustic modem; Observers; Position measurement; Underwater acoustics; Underwater communication; Underwater vehicles; Acoustic communications; autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs); robotic networks;
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2013.2268292