Swarm-LIO2: Decentralized, Efficient LiDAR-inertial Odometry for UAV Swarms

Zhu, Fangcheng, Ren, Yunfan, Yin, Longji, Kong, Fanze, Liu, Qingbo, Xue, Ruize, Liu, Wenyi, Cai, Yixi, Lu, Guozheng, Li, Haotian, Zhang, Fu

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

Abstract--Aerial swarm systems possess immense potential in various aspects, such as cooperative exploration, target tracking, search and rescue. Efficient, accurate self and mutual state estimation are the critical preconditions for completing these swarm tasks, which remain challenging research topics. This paper proposes Swarm-LIO2: a fully decentralized, plug-andplay, computationally efficient, and bandwidth-efficient LiDARinertial odometry for aerial swarm systems. Swarm-LIO2 uses a decentralized, plug-and-play network as the communication infrastructure. Only bandwidth-efficient and low-dimensional information is exchanged, including identity, ego-state, mutual observation measurements, and global extrinsic transformations. To support the plug-and-play of new teammate participants, Swarm-LIO2 detects potential teammate UAVs and initializes the temporal offset and global extrinsic transformation all automatically. For state estimation, Swarm-details can be found in the attached video at https://youtu.be/Q7cJ9iRhlrY GPS-denied scenes, degenerated scenes for cameras or LiDARs. GPS and RTK-GPS are commonly used for self-localization in outdoor environments, as reported in previous studies [22, 23]. N recent years, multi-robot systems, especially aerial swarm systems, have exhibited great potential in many for state estimation in multi-robot systems. These methods fields, such as collaborative autonomous exploration[1, 2, 3], [24, 25, 26, 27] often rely on the stationary ground station, target tracking[4, 5, 6, 7], search and rescue[8, 9, 10], etc. resulting in a centralized system that is prone to single-pointof-failure. Although the complementary and observed teammate locations (i.e., mutual observation anchor-free UWB can provide distance measurements, it is measurements), which are enhanced by careful measurement susceptible to multi-path effects and obstacle occlusion in the modeling and temporal compensation.