Spelling suggestions: "subject:"dubins path"" "subject:"dubins math""
1 |
Evolutionary Design of Near-Optimal Controllers for Autonomous Systems Operating in Adversarial EnvironmentsAndroulakakis, Pavlos 04 October 2021 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Dynamic Mission Planning for Unmanned Aerial VehiclesRennu, Samantha R. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
|
3 |
Route Planning and Design of Autonomous Underwater Mine Reconnaissance Through Multi-Vehicle CooperationHanskov Palm, Jakob January 2020 (has links)
Autonomous underwater vehicles have become a popular countermeasure to naval mines. Saab’s AUV62-MR detects, locates and identifies mine-like objects through three phases. By extracting functionality from the AUV62-MR and placing it on a second vehicle, it is suggested that the second and third phases can be performed in parallel. This thesis investigates how to design the second vehicle so that the runtime of the mine reconnaissance process is minimized. A simulation framework is implemented to simulate the second and third phases of the mine reconnaissance process in order to test various design choices. The vehicle design choices in focus are the size and the route planning of the second vehicle. The route-planning algorithms investigated in this thesis are a nearest neighbour algorithm, a simulated annealing algorithm, an alternating algorithm, a genetic algorithm and a proposed Dubins simulated annealing algorithm. The algorithms are evaluated both in a static environment and in the simulation framework. Two different vehicle sizes are investigated, a small and a large, by evaluating their performances in the simulation framework. This thesis takes into account the limited travelling distance of the vehicle and implements a k-means clustering algorithm to help the route planner determine which mine-like objects can be scanned without exceeding the distance limit. The simulation framework is also used to evaluate whether parallel execution of the second and third phases outperforms the current sequential execution. The performance evaluation shows that a major reduction in runtime can be gained by performing the two phases in parallel. The Dubins simulated annealing algorithm on average produces the shortest paths and is considered the preferred route-planning algorithm according to the performance evaluation. It also indicates that a small vehicle size results in a reduced runtime compared to a larger vehicle.
|
Page generated in 0.0551 seconds