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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Tracking motion in mineshafts : Using monocular visual odometry

Suikki, Karl January 2022 (has links)
LKAB has a mineshaft trolley used for scanning mineshafts. It is suspended down into a mineshaft by wire, scanning the mineshaft on both descent and ascent using two LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) sensors and an IMU (Internal Measurement Unit) used for tracking the position. With good tracking, one could use the LiDAR scans to create a three-dimensional model of the mineshaft which could be used for monitoring, planning and visualization in the future. Tracking with IMU is very unstable since most IMUs are susceptible to disturbances and will drift over time; we strive to track the movement using monocular visual odometry instead. Visual odometry is used to track movement based on video or images. It is the process of retrieving the pose of a camera by analyzing a sequence of images from one or multiple cameras. The mineshaft trolley is also equipped with one camera which is filming the descent and ascent and we aim to use this video for tracking. We present a simple algorithm for visual odometry and test its tracking on multiple datasets being: KITTI datasets of traffic scenes accompanied by their ground truth trajectories, mineshaft data intended for the mineshaft trolley operator and self-captured data accompanied by an approximate ground truth trajectory. The algorithm is feature based, meaning that it is focused on tracking recognizable keypoints in sequent images. We compare the performance of our algortihm by tracking the different datasets using two different feature detection and description systems, ORB and SIFT. We find that our algorithm performs well on tracking the movement of the KITTI datasets using both ORB and SIFT whose largest total errors of estimated trajectories are $3.1$ m and $0.7$ m for ORB and SIFT respectively in $51.8$ m moved. This was compared to their ground truth trajectories. The tracking of the self-captured dataset shows by visual inspection that the algorithm can perform well on data which has not been as carefully captured as the KITTI datasets. We do however find that we cannot track the movement with the current data from the mineshaft. This is due to the algorithm finding too few matching features in sequent images, breaking the pose estimation of the visual odometry. We make a comparison of how ORB and SIFT finds features in the mineshaft images and find that SIFT performs better by finding more features. The mineshaft data was never intended for visual odometry and therefore it is not suitable for this purpose either. We argue that the tracking could work in the mineshaft if the visual conditions are made better by focusing on more even lighting and camera placement or if it can be combined with other sensors such as an IMU, that assist the visual odometry when it fails.
2

Localization of Combat Aircraft at High Altitude using Visual Odometry

Nilsson Boij, Jenny January 2022 (has links)
Most of the navigation systems used in today’s aircraft rely on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). However, GNSS is not fully reliable. For example, it can be jammed by attacks on the space or ground segments of the system or denied at inaccessible areas. Hence to ensure successful navigation it is of great importance to continuously be able to establish the aircraft’s location without having to rely on external reference systems. Localization is one of many sub-problems in navigation and will be the focus of this thesis. This brings us to the field of visual odometry (VO), which involves determining position and orientation with the help of images from one or more camera sensors. But to date, most VO systems have primarily been established on ground vehicles and low flying multi-rotor systems. This thesis seeks to extend VO to new applications by exploring it in a fairly new context; a fixed-wing piloted combat aircraft, for vision-only pose estimation in applications of extremely large scene depth. A major part of this research work is the data gathering, where the data is collected using the flight simulator X-Plane 11. Three different flight routes are flown; a straight line, a curve and a loop, for two types of visual conditions; in clear weather with daylight and during sunset. The method used in this work is ORB-SLAM3, an open-source library for visual simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM). It has shown excellent results in previous works and has become a benchmark method often used in the field of visual pose estimation. ORB-SLAM3 tracks the straight line of 78 km very well at an altitude over 2700 m. The absolute trajectory error (ATE) is 0.072% of the total distance traveled in daylight and 0.11% during sunset. These results are of the same magnitude as ORB-SLAM3 on the EuRoC MAV dataset. For the curved trajectory of 79 km ATE is 2.0% and 1.2% of total distance traveled in daylight and sunset respectively.  The longest flight route of 258 km shows the challenges of visual pose estimation. Although it is managing to close loops in daylight, it has an ATE of 3.6% during daylight. During sunset the features do not possess enough invariant characteristics to close loops, resulting in an even larger ATE of 14% of total distance traveled. Hence to be able to use and properly rely on vision in localization, more sensor information is needed. But since all aircraft already possess an inertial measurement unit (IMU), the future work naturally includes IMU data in the system. Nevertheless, the results from this research show that vision is useful, even at the high altitudes and speeds used by a combat aircraft.
3

Monocular Visual Odometry for Autonomous Underwater Navigation : An analysis of learning-based monocular visual odometry approaches in underwater scenarios / Monokulär Visuell Odometri för Autonom Undervattensnavigering : En analys av inlärningsbaserade monokulära visuella odometri-metoder i undervattensscenarier

Caraffa, Andrea January 2021 (has links)
Visual Odometry (VO) is the process of estimating the relative motion of a vehicle by using solely image data gathered from the camera. In underwater environments, VO becomes extremely challenging but valuable since ordinary sensors for on-road localization are usually unpractical in these hostile environments. For years, VO methods have been purely based on Computer Vision (CV) principles. However, the recent advances in Deep Learning (DL) have ushered in a new era for VO approaches. These novel methods have achieved impressive performance with state-of-the-art results on urban datasets. Nevertheless, little effort has been made to push learning-based research towards natural environments, such as underwater. Consequently, this work aims to bridge the research gap by evaluating the effectiveness of the learning-based approach in the navigation of Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs). We compare two learning-based methods with a traditional feature-based method on the Underwater Caves dataset, a very challenging dataset collected in the unstructured environment of an underwater cave complex. Extensive experiments are thus conducted training the models on this dataset. Moreover, we investigate different aspects and propose several improvements, such as sub-sampling the video clips to emphasize the camera motion between consecutive frames, or training exclusively on images with relevant content discarding those with dark borders and representing solely sandy bottoms. Finally, during the training, we also leverage underwater images from other datasets, hence acquired from different cameras. However, the best improvement is obtained by penalizing rotations around the x-axis of the camera coordinate system. The three methods are evaluated on test sequences that cover different lighting conditions. In the most favorable environments, although learning-based methods are not up to par with the feature-based method, the results show great potential. Furthermore, in extreme lighting conditions, where the feature-based baseline sharply fails to bootstrap, one of the two learning-based methods produces instead qualitatively good trajectory results, revealing the power of the learning-based approach in this peculiar context. / Visuell Odometri (VO) används för att uppskatta den relativa rörelsen för ett fordon med hjälp av enbart bilddata från en eller flera kameror. I undervattensmiljöer blir VO extremt utmanande men värdefullt eftersom vanliga sensorer för lokalisering vanligtvis är opraktiska i dessa svåra miljöer. I åratal har VO-metoder enbart baserats på klassisk datorseende. De senaste framstegen inom djupinlärning har dock inlett en ny era för VO-metoder. Dessa nya metoder har uppnått imponerande prestanda på dataset urbana miljöer. Trots detta har ganska lite gjorts för att driva den inlärningsbaserad forskningen mot naturliga miljöer, till exempel under vattnet. Följaktligen syftar detta arbete till att överbrygga forskningsgapet genom att utvärdera effektiviteten hos det inlärningsbaserade tillvägagångssättet vid navigering av autonoma undervattensfordon (AUV). Vi jämför två inlärningsbaserade metoder med en traditionell nyckelpunktsbaserad metod som referens. Vi gör jämförelsen på Underwater Caves-datasetet, ett mycket utmanande dataset som samlats in i den ostrukturerade miljön i ett undervattensgrottkomplex. Omfattande experiment utförs för att träna modellerna på detta dataset. Vi undersöker också olika aspekter och föreslår flera förbättringar, till exempel, att delsampla videoklippen för att betona kamerarörelsen mellan på varandra följande bildrutor, eller att träna på en delmängd av datasetet bestående uteslutande på bilder med relevant innehåll för att förbättra skattningen av rörelsen. Under träningen utnyttjar vi också undervattensbilder från andra datamängder, och därmed från olika kameror. Den bästa förbättringen uppnås dock genom att straffa skattningar av stora rotationer runt kamerakoordinatsystemets x-axel. De tre metoderna utvärderas på testsekvenser som täcker olika ljusförhållanden. I de mest gynnsamma miljöerna visar resultaten stor potential, även om de inlärningsbaserade metoder inte är i nivå med den traditionella referensmetoden. Vid extrema ljusförhållanden, där referensmetoden misslyckas att ens initialisera, ger en av de två inlärningsbaserade metoderna istället kvalitativt bra resultat, vilket demonstrerar kraften i det inlärningsbaserade tillvägagångssättet i detta specifika sammanhang.

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