• DocumentCode
    1746968
  • Title

    Multi-agent system for formation flying missions

  • Author

    Mandutianu, Sanda ; Hadaegh, Fred ; Elliot, Paul

  • Author_Institution
    Jet Propulsion Lab., MIT, Pasadena, MS, USA
  • Volume
    6
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    2001
  • Firstpage
    2793
  • Abstract
    Concerns use of spacecraft as autonomous coordinated teams. Generalized reasoning capability offered by advanced distributed software technology and AI can cope with unexpected events and uncertainty, and so close the loop of perception, decision and eventually deliberation. The team members play interchangeable roles and negotiate about the task. We present a multi-agent system to provide a high degree of autonomy and support for coordination among team members. We use JPL formation flying mission initial architectures as benchmark. Our target is to avoid inconsistencies/disagreements between two or more participants in a collaborative context, increase the system´s fault tolerance in cases such as loss of a member while the system still operates reliably. We address cooperation between collaborating independent autonomous agents. In a top-down organization agents are coordinated hierarchically, where the agents at the top of the hierarchy make the majority of the intelligent group decisions. In a more structured but still hierarchical organization, lower-level agents exercise more intelligence. A lower-level agent can advance a plan for the others to follow, and a higher-rank agent decides on the best plans. Although more rigid, the centralized intelligence organization allows for less communication among agents, so is more straightforward to implement. The decentralized approach requires more communication, but the intelligence is truly distributed, which makes for a more flexible, adaptive and efficient organization
  • Keywords
    aerospace control; distributed processing; hierarchical systems; intelligent control; mobile robots; multi-agent systems; multi-robot systems; space vehicles; AI; JPL formation flying mission initial architectures; Spacecraft; advanced distributed software technology; autonomous coordinated teams; fault tolerance; formation flying missions; generalized reasoning capability; hierarchical organization; multiagent system; team member coordination; top-down organization; Artificial intelligence; Autonomous agents; Collaboration; Fault tolerant systems; Intelligent agent; Intelligent structures; Multiagent systems; Space technology; Space vehicles; Uncertainty;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Aerospace Conference, 2001, IEEE Proceedings.
  • Conference_Location
    Big Sky, MT
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-6599-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AERO.2001.931299
  • Filename
    931299