Geometric Data-Driven Multi-Jet Locomotion Inspired by Salps

Yang, Yanhao, Hecht, Nina L., Salaman-Maclara, Yousef, Justus, Nathan, Thomas, Zachary A., Rozaidi, Farhan, Hatton, Ross L.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

--Salps are marine animals consisting of chains of jellyfish-like units. Their capacity for effective underwater undulatory locomotion through coordinating multi-jet propulsion has aroused significant interest in the field of robotics and inspired extensive research including design, modeling, and control. In this paper, we conduct a comprehensive analysis of the locomotion of salp-like systems using the robotic platform "LandSalp" based on geometric mechanics, including mechanism design, dynamic modeling, system identification, and motion planning and control. Our work takes a step toward a better understanding of salps' underwater locomotion and provides a clear path for extending these insights to more complex and capable underwater robotic systems. Furthermore, this study illustrates the effectiveness of geometric mechanics in bio-inspired robots for efficient data-driven locomotion modeling, demonstrated by learning the dynamics of LandSalp from only 3 minutes of experimental data. Lastly, we extend the geometric mechanics principles to multi-jet propulsion systems with stability considerations and validate the theory through experiments on the LandSalp hardware. These creatures are capable of efficient underwater undulatory locomotion by coordinating multi-jet propulsion. The structure and locomotion patterns of salps are closely related, which has attracted widespread interest in both biological and ecological research [1-5]. In the field of robotics, salps have attracted increasing attention due to their jet propulsion by expelling water through contraction, efficient underwater locomotion, and multi-unit coordination. Salps and jellyfish have inspired numerous robotic studies on the design of jet propulsion soft robots [6-12] and multi-robot coordination [13-17]. However, in the field of motion planning and control, most studies primarily consider undulatory locomotion by self-propulsion via body deformation [18-23], with only a few works involving underwater locomotion using jet propulsion [24-26]. This work was supported in part by ONR A ward N00014-23-1-2171. All the authors are with the Collaborative Robotics and Intelligent Systems (CoRIS) Institute at Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR USA. The units composing biological salps are called "zooids" (i.e., pseudoan-imals or not-quite-animals) because they exhibit many properties of animals but are not independent organisms from the colony. To discuss the general properties of multi-jet locomotion without making claims about the biological systems that inspire them, we use the terminology "chains" and "units" throughout this paper. The salp picture is reproduced from [27].