1 / 13

Undergraduate Capstone Projects on Multi-Robot Systems

Undergraduate Capstone Projects on Multi-Robot Systems. Authored by: Dr. Christopher Kitts Associate Professor Director, Robotic Systems Laboratory Director, Silicon Valley Center for Robotic Exploration & Space Technologies Presented by: Mr. Mike Rasay

jirair
Télécharger la présentation

Undergraduate Capstone Projects on Multi-Robot Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Undergraduate Capstone Projects on Multi-Robot Systems Authored by: Dr. Christopher Kitts Associate Professor Director, Robotic Systems Laboratory Director, Silicon Valley Center for Robotic Exploration & Space Technologies Presented by: Mr. Mike Rasay Doctoral Candidate, Robotic Systems Laboratory

  2. Outline • Introduction • Undergraduate Projects • Formation Flying Aircraft • Cooperative Rover Navigation • Cooperative Object Transport • Academic Framework • Summary & Conclusions

  3. Robotic Systems Laboratory • Lab: 1 faculty, 3 staff, ~10 grad students, ~35 undergrad students External funding: ~$750,000/yr from gov, industry, academia Space: ~2,000 ft2 on campus,~7,500 ft2 facility at NASA Ames • Expertise: system design, controls, teleoperation, automation, etc. • Current Field Robotics --------------------------Land – Sea – Air – Space------------------------------- ----------- Sponsors & Partners------------ Gov: NSF, NASA, USAF, NOAA,USGS… Ind: Lockheed, CSA, Mitsubishi, BMW… Univ: Stanford, Wash U, UT Austin… Non-Profit: CSGC, MBARI, IEEE, MTS… - Applications- Geology Biology Land Mngmnt Remote Sensing Archeology --Field Operation for Real-World Missions-- --------------- Real Mission Data Products---------------

  4. Multi-Robot Systems - Introduction • Selected RSL multi-robot projects Land: Rovers for Transport Sea: ROVs for Filming Air: Planes for Imaging Space: Satellite Formation Test

  5. Project 1 – Formation Flying Aircraft • 3-student 2005 project • Added sensors, pan/tilt camera, digital and video comms, microcontrollers, and commercial autopilot to RC aircraft • Developed “follow-the-leader” formation flying, auto take-off and landing • Approved for UAV flight in FAA Class D airspace • 3rd in AUVSI International Graduate UAV Contest

  6. Project 2 – Coordinated Rover Navigation • 5-student 2005 project • Added sensors, digital comm, & microcontrollers to commercial chasses • Integrated Matlab controllers and demonstrated “cluster control” navigation • 3 of these students used system for grad thesis work; 1 PhD and 3 Masters theses in progress using this system • Basis of new NSF project in multi-robot navigation

  7. Project 3 – Coordinated Object Transportation • 4 student 2004 project and 5 student 2005 project • Team1: Developed 2 velocity-controlled omnidriven chasses • Team 2: Developed gripper stages and controller for object transport with no transmission of forces/torques • Overhead vision system has been added for tracking • System has supported 4 Masters theses and a PhD project is about to begin

  8. Student Learning • Learning outcomes • Interdisciplinary design: teams include mech, elec, comp engineers • Full-lifecycle exposure: students involved from design through field operation • Tools: students learn modern design and analysis tools to support projects • Techniques: students practice project man., systems eng., concurrent design • Themes for success: • Real-world missions • New technology development with potential for research • Pro-active oversight and mentoring • Challenges: • Faculty attention on undergrad projects (detracting from other duties) • Resources for supporting such a program • How do we integrate our program to address these challenges?

  9. Academic Framework – Field Robotics Education / Science / Technology Customers Mission Objectives Technology Objectives Mission Development Technology Development Robotic Systems Field Operation

  10. Academic Framework – Field Robotics Education / Science / Technology Customers Mission Objectives Technology Objectives Design Education Opportunities and Impact – Education is Comprehensive, Team-Based, and Hands-on Research Opportunities and Impact – Research is Well-Grounded and Attracts Grad Students Mission Development Technology Development Robotic Systems Field Operation Mission Science & Services Impact

  11. Academic Framework – Field Robotics Education / Science / Technology Customers Mission Objectives Technology Objectives Design Education Opportunities and Impact – Education is Comprehensive, Team-Based, and Hands-on Research Opportunities and Impact – Research is Well-Grounded and Attracts Grad Students Mission Development Technology Development Robotic Systems - Integrative research & education - Undergraduate research - Stimulation of grad school interest - Industry/gov/academic collaborations Field Operation Mission Science & Services Impact

  12. Academic Framework – Field Robotics Education / Science / Technology Customers Funding Opportunities Mission Objectives Technology Objectives Design Education Opportunities and Impact – Education is Comprehensive, Team-Based, and Hands-on Research Opportunities and Impact – Research is Well-Grounded and Attracts Grad Students Mission Development Technology Development Robotic Systems Infrastructure for Courses & Future Missions - Integrative research & education - Undergraduate research - Stimulation of grad school interest - Industry/gov/academic collaborations Field Operation Mission Science & Services Impact

  13. Summary & Conclusions • SCU field robotics program • Robotic systems built for land, sea, air, and space missions • Cradle to grave design and operation of systems • Numerous collaborators/sponsors from industry, academia, government • Undergraduate Capstone Projects in Multi-Robot Systems • Formation aircraft, cooperative rover navigation, cooperative object transport • Each a remarkable achievement for an undergraduate team • Academic Framework • Exciting opportunities enabling undergraduate educational excellence • To attract and justify investment in these projects, they are leveraged such that:the resulting robotic systems are used: • As research testbeds for graduate research • As primary field systems for real-world science and technology missions

More Related