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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

Control of nonholonomic systems

Yuan, Hongliang. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Central Florida, 2009. / Adviser: Zhihua Qu. Includes bibliographical references (p. 138-143).
2

Geometry and Dynamics of Nonoholonomic affine mechanical systems

Petit Valdes Villarreal, Paolo Eugenio 05 July 2023 (has links)
In this Thesis we study two types of mechanical nonholonomic systems, namely systems with linear constraints and lagrangian with a linear term in the velocities, and nonholonomic systems with affine constraints and lagrangian without a linear term in the velocities. For the former type of systems we construct an almost-Poisson bracket using elements related to a riemannian metric induced by the kinetic energy, and we show that under certain conditions gauge momenta exist. For the latter type of systems, we focus on the ones possessing a \emph{Noether symmetry}. To everyone of these systems we associate an equivalent system of the former type, and we exhibit the procedure to relate them and their gauge momentum. As a test case for the theory, we analyze the system of a heavy ball rolling without slipping on a rotating surface of revolution: we elucidate that also in this framework the so-called Routh integrals are related to symmetries, we give conditions for boundedness of the motions. In the particular case the surface of revolution is an inverted cone we characterize the qualitative behavior of the motions.
3

Lagrange-d'alembert integrators

Cuell, Charles Lee 08 June 2007
A Lagrange--d'Alembert integrator is a geometric numerical method for finding numerical solutions to the Lagrange--d'Alembert equations for mechanical systems with nonholonomic constraints that are linear in the velocities. The integrator is developed from geometry and principles that are analogues of the continuous theory.<p>Using discrete analogues of the symplectic form and momentum map, the resulting methods are symplectic and momentum preserving whenever the continuous system is symplectic and momentum preserving. In addition, it is possible to, in principle, generate Lagrange--d'Alembert integrators of any method order.
4

Bounded-curvature motion planning amid polygonal obstacles

Backer, Jonathan 05 1900 (has links)
We consider the problem of finding a bounded-curvature path in the plane from one configuration αs to another configuration αt that avoids the interior of a set of polygonal obstacles Ε. We call any such path from αs to αt a feasible path. In this thesis, we develop algorithms to find feasible paths that have explicit guarantees on when they will return a feasible path. We phrase our guarantees and run time analysis in terms of the complexity of the desired solution (see k and λ below). In a sense, our algorithms are output sensitive, which is particularly desirable because there are no known bounds on the solution complexity amid arbitrary polygonal environments. Our first major result is an algorithm that given Ε, αs, αt, and a positive integer k either (i) verifies that every feasible path has a descriptive complexity greater than k or (ii) outputs a feasible path. The run time of this algorithm is bounded by a polynomial in n (the total number of obstacle vertices in Ε), m (the bit precision of the input), and k. This result complements earlier work by Fortune and Wilfong: their algorithm considers paths of arbitrary descriptive complexity (it has no dependence on k), but it never outputs a path, just whether or not a feasible path exists. Our second major result is an algorithm that given E, αs, αt, a length λ, and an approximation factor Ε, either (i) verifies that every feasible path has length greater than λ or (ii) constructs a feasible path that is at most (1+ Ε) times longer than the shortest feasible path. The run time of this algorithm is bounded by a polynomial in n, m, Ε-1, and λ. This algorithm is the result of applying the techniques developed earlier in our thesis to the previous approximation approaches. A shortcoming of these prior approximation algorithms is that they only search a special class of feasible paths. This restriction implies that the path that they return may be arbitrarily longer than the shortest path. Our algorithm returns a true approximation because we search for arbitrary shortest paths.
5

Lagrange-d'alembert integrators

Cuell, Charles Lee 08 June 2007 (has links)
A Lagrange--d'Alembert integrator is a geometric numerical method for finding numerical solutions to the Lagrange--d'Alembert equations for mechanical systems with nonholonomic constraints that are linear in the velocities. The integrator is developed from geometry and principles that are analogues of the continuous theory.<p>Using discrete analogues of the symplectic form and momentum map, the resulting methods are symplectic and momentum preserving whenever the continuous system is symplectic and momentum preserving. In addition, it is possible to, in principle, generate Lagrange--d'Alembert integrators of any method order.
6

Formation control for cooperative surveillance

Woo, Sang-Bum 15 May 2009 (has links)
Constructing and maintaining a formation is critical in applications of cooperative control of multi-agent systems. In this research we address the formation control problem of generating a formation for a group of nonholonomic mobile agents. The formation control scheme proposed in this work is based on a fusion of leader-follower and virtual reference approaches. This scheme gives a formation constraint representation that is independent of the number of agents in the formation and the resulting control algorithm is scalable. One of the important desired features in controller design is that the formation errors defined by formation constraints should be stabilized globally and exponentially by the controller. The proposed controller is based on feedback linearization, and formation errors are shown to be globally exponentially stable in the sense of Lyapunov. Since formation errors are stabilized globally, the proposed controller is applicable to both formation keeping and formation construction problems. As a possible application, the proposed algorithm is implemented in a cooperative ground moving target surveillance scenario. The proposed algorithm enables the determination of the minimal number of agents required for surveillance of a moving target. The number of agents returned by this scheme is not optimal and hence is a conservative solution. However, this is justified by the computational savings the scheme offers.
7

Bounded-curvature motion planning amid polygonal obstacles

Backer, Jonathan 05 1900 (has links)
We consider the problem of finding a bounded-curvature path in the plane from one configuration αs to another configuration αt that avoids the interior of a set of polygonal obstacles Ε. We call any such path from αs to αt a feasible path. In this thesis, we develop algorithms to find feasible paths that have explicit guarantees on when they will return a feasible path. We phrase our guarantees and run time analysis in terms of the complexity of the desired solution (see k and λ below). In a sense, our algorithms are output sensitive, which is particularly desirable because there are no known bounds on the solution complexity amid arbitrary polygonal environments. Our first major result is an algorithm that given Ε, αs, αt, and a positive integer k either (i) verifies that every feasible path has a descriptive complexity greater than k or (ii) outputs a feasible path. The run time of this algorithm is bounded by a polynomial in n (the total number of obstacle vertices in Ε), m (the bit precision of the input), and k. This result complements earlier work by Fortune and Wilfong: their algorithm considers paths of arbitrary descriptive complexity (it has no dependence on k), but it never outputs a path, just whether or not a feasible path exists. Our second major result is an algorithm that given E, αs, αt, a length λ, and an approximation factor Ε, either (i) verifies that every feasible path has length greater than λ or (ii) constructs a feasible path that is at most (1+ Ε) times longer than the shortest feasible path. The run time of this algorithm is bounded by a polynomial in n, m, Ε-1, and λ. This algorithm is the result of applying the techniques developed earlier in our thesis to the previous approximation approaches. A shortcoming of these prior approximation algorithms is that they only search a special class of feasible paths. This restriction implies that the path that they return may be arbitrarily longer than the shortest path. Our algorithm returns a true approximation because we search for arbitrary shortest paths.
8

Constrained nonlinear model predictive control for vehicle regulation

Zhu, Yongjie, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2008. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 104-110).
9

Real-time trajectory planning for ground and aerial vehicles in a dynamic environment

Yang, Jian. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Central Florida, 2008. / Adviser: Zhihua Qu. Includes bibliographical references (p. 117-121).
10

Bounded-curvature motion planning amid polygonal obstacles

Backer, Jonathan 05 1900 (has links)
We consider the problem of finding a bounded-curvature path in the plane from one configuration αs to another configuration αt that avoids the interior of a set of polygonal obstacles Ε. We call any such path from αs to αt a feasible path. In this thesis, we develop algorithms to find feasible paths that have explicit guarantees on when they will return a feasible path. We phrase our guarantees and run time analysis in terms of the complexity of the desired solution (see k and λ below). In a sense, our algorithms are output sensitive, which is particularly desirable because there are no known bounds on the solution complexity amid arbitrary polygonal environments. Our first major result is an algorithm that given Ε, αs, αt, and a positive integer k either (i) verifies that every feasible path has a descriptive complexity greater than k or (ii) outputs a feasible path. The run time of this algorithm is bounded by a polynomial in n (the total number of obstacle vertices in Ε), m (the bit precision of the input), and k. This result complements earlier work by Fortune and Wilfong: their algorithm considers paths of arbitrary descriptive complexity (it has no dependence on k), but it never outputs a path, just whether or not a feasible path exists. Our second major result is an algorithm that given E, αs, αt, a length λ, and an approximation factor Ε, either (i) verifies that every feasible path has length greater than λ or (ii) constructs a feasible path that is at most (1+ Ε) times longer than the shortest feasible path. The run time of this algorithm is bounded by a polynomial in n, m, Ε-1, and λ. This algorithm is the result of applying the techniques developed earlier in our thesis to the previous approximation approaches. A shortcoming of these prior approximation algorithms is that they only search a special class of feasible paths. This restriction implies that the path that they return may be arbitrarily longer than the shortest path. Our algorithm returns a true approximation because we search for arbitrary shortest paths. / Science, Faculty of / Computer Science, Department of / Graduate

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