Underwater Robot Pose Estimation Using Acoustic Methods and Intermittent Position Measurements at the Surface
Maer, Vicu-Mihalis, Tamas, Levente, Busoniu, Lucian
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Global positioning systems can provide sufficient positioning accuracy for large scale robotic tasks in open environments. However, in underwater environments, these systems cannot be directly used, and measuring the position of underwater robots becomes more difficult. In this paper we first evaluate the performance of existing pose estimation techniques for an underwater robot equipped with commonly used sensors for underwater control and pose estimation, in a simulated environment. In our case these sensors are inertial measurement units, Doppler velocity log sensors, and ultra-short baseline sensors. Secondly, for situations in which underwater estimation suffers from drift, we investigate the benefit of intermittently correcting the position using a high-precision surface-based sensor, such as regular GPS or an assisting unmanned aerial vehicle that tracks the underwater robot from above using a camera.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Dec-18-2023
- Country:
- Europe
- Germany > Bavaria
- Upper Bavaria > Munich (0.04)
- Romania > Nord-Vest Development Region
- Cluj County > Cluj-Napoca (0.06)
- Germany > Bavaria
- Europe
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.50)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Robots (1.00)
- Vision > Video Understanding (0.83)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence