Title :
Robot global tracking with finite vector reachability time
Author :
Gruyitch, Lyubomir T.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Technol. Belfort - Montbeliard (UTBM), Belfort, France
fDate :
Aug. 31 1999-Sept. 3 1999
Abstract :
A robot and its dynamical actuators are mathematically modelled in a general form of a 3D system without any particular information either about system parameters and nonlinearities or about external disturbances. A demanded system tracking quality is global elementwise q-tracking without oscillations and with a requested finite reachability time. It is described by a vector differential equation in terms of the q-error vector. In order for a q-tracking control to exist for such a system and under such uncertainty, and which will guarantee the demanded tracking quality, the robot should obey a qualitative dynamical property called its global natural elementwise q-trackability. The necessary and sufficient condition for global natural elementwise q-trackability is presented. It composes a part of the whole set of the necessary and sufficient conditions for a control to be global natural q-tracking control for the robot, which guarantees the requested tracking quality. The results are based on new issues in the framework of the robotic systems such as a novel physical principle called the Physical Continuity and Uniqueness Principle, the concept of global natural elementwise q-trackability and the concept of the natural q-tracking control.
Keywords :
differential equations; reachability analysis; robot dynamics; robots; tracking; vectors; 3D system; dynamical actuators; finite vector reachability time; global elementwise q-tracking without oscillations; global natural elementwise q-trackability; global natural q-tracking control; necessary condition; physical continuity principle; q-error vector; qualitative dynamical property; robot global tracking; sufficient condition; system tracking quality; uniqueness principle; vector differential equation; Actuators; Finite element analysis; Mathematical model; Robot sensing systems; Robustness; Robot control; robustness; tracking theory;
Conference_Titel :
Control Conference (ECC), 1999 European
Conference_Location :
Karlsruhe
Print_ISBN :
978-3-9524173-5-5