Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control

Cooperative control problems for multiple vehicle systems can be categorized as either formation control problems with applications to mobile robots, unmanned air vehicles, autonomous underwater vehicles, satellites, aircraft, spacecraft, and automated highway systems, or non-formation control probl...

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Main Author: Ren, Wei
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/153
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1152&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-11522019-05-16T03:21:54Z Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control Ren, Wei Cooperative control problems for multiple vehicle systems can be categorized as either formation control problems with applications to mobile robots, unmanned air vehicles, autonomous underwater vehicles, satellites, aircraft, spacecraft, and automated highway systems, or non-formation control problems such as task assignment, cooperative transport, cooperative role assignment, air traffic control, cooperative timing, and cooperative search. The cooperative control of multiple vehicle systems poses significant theoretical and practical challenges. For cooperative control strategies to be successful, numerous issues must be addressed. We consider three important and correlated issues: consensus seeking, formation keeping, and trajectory tracking. For consensus seeking, we investigate algorithms and protocols so that a team of vehicles can reach consensus on the values of the coordination data in the presence of imperfect sensors, communication dropout, sparse communication topologies, and noisy and unreliable communication links. The main contribution of this dissertation in this area is that we show necessary and/or sufficient conditions for consensus seeking with limited, unidirectional, and unreliable information exchange under fixed and switching interaction topologies (through either communication or sensing). For formation keeping, we apply a so-called "virtual structure" approach to spacecraft formation flying and multi-vehicle formation maneuvers. As a result, single vehicle path planning and trajectory generation techniques can be employed for the virtual structure while trajectory tracking strategies can be employed for each vehicle. The main contribution of this dissertation in this area is that we propose a decentralized architecture for multiple spacecraft formation flying in deep space with formation feedback introduced. This architecture ensures the necessary precision in the presence of actuator saturation, internal and external disturbances, and stringent inter-vehicle communication limitations. A constructive approach based on the satisficing control paradigm is also applied to multi-robot coordination in hardware. For trajectory tracking, we investigate nonlinear tracking controllers for fixed wing unmanned air vehicles and nonholonomic mobile robots with velocity and heading rate constraints. The main contribution of this dissertation in this area is that our proposed tracking controllers are shown to be robust to input uncertainties and measurement noise, and are computationally simple and can be implemented with low-cost, low-power microcontrollers. In addition, our approach allows piecewise continuous reference velocity and heading rate and can be extended to derive a variety of other trajectory tracking strategies. 2004-07-08T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/153 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1152&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive information consensus multi-agent systems cooperative control switched systems graph theory formation keeping formation flying multi-agent coordination unmanned air vehicles constrained control trajectory tracking satisficing control Electrical and Computer Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic information consensus
multi-agent systems
cooperative control
switched systems
graph theory
formation keeping
formation flying
multi-agent coordination
unmanned air vehicles
constrained control
trajectory tracking
satisficing control
Electrical and Computer Engineering
spellingShingle information consensus
multi-agent systems
cooperative control
switched systems
graph theory
formation keeping
formation flying
multi-agent coordination
unmanned air vehicles
constrained control
trajectory tracking
satisficing control
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Ren, Wei
Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control
description Cooperative control problems for multiple vehicle systems can be categorized as either formation control problems with applications to mobile robots, unmanned air vehicles, autonomous underwater vehicles, satellites, aircraft, spacecraft, and automated highway systems, or non-formation control problems such as task assignment, cooperative transport, cooperative role assignment, air traffic control, cooperative timing, and cooperative search. The cooperative control of multiple vehicle systems poses significant theoretical and practical challenges. For cooperative control strategies to be successful, numerous issues must be addressed. We consider three important and correlated issues: consensus seeking, formation keeping, and trajectory tracking. For consensus seeking, we investigate algorithms and protocols so that a team of vehicles can reach consensus on the values of the coordination data in the presence of imperfect sensors, communication dropout, sparse communication topologies, and noisy and unreliable communication links. The main contribution of this dissertation in this area is that we show necessary and/or sufficient conditions for consensus seeking with limited, unidirectional, and unreliable information exchange under fixed and switching interaction topologies (through either communication or sensing). For formation keeping, we apply a so-called "virtual structure" approach to spacecraft formation flying and multi-vehicle formation maneuvers. As a result, single vehicle path planning and trajectory generation techniques can be employed for the virtual structure while trajectory tracking strategies can be employed for each vehicle. The main contribution of this dissertation in this area is that we propose a decentralized architecture for multiple spacecraft formation flying in deep space with formation feedback introduced. This architecture ensures the necessary precision in the presence of actuator saturation, internal and external disturbances, and stringent inter-vehicle communication limitations. A constructive approach based on the satisficing control paradigm is also applied to multi-robot coordination in hardware. For trajectory tracking, we investigate nonlinear tracking controllers for fixed wing unmanned air vehicles and nonholonomic mobile robots with velocity and heading rate constraints. The main contribution of this dissertation in this area is that our proposed tracking controllers are shown to be robust to input uncertainties and measurement noise, and are computationally simple and can be implemented with low-cost, low-power microcontrollers. In addition, our approach allows piecewise continuous reference velocity and heading rate and can be extended to derive a variety of other trajectory tracking strategies.
author Ren, Wei
author_facet Ren, Wei
author_sort Ren, Wei
title Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control
title_short Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control
title_full Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control
title_fullStr Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control
title_full_unstemmed Consensus Seeking, Formation Keeping, and Trajectory Tracking in Multiple Vehicle Cooperative Control
title_sort consensus seeking, formation keeping, and trajectory tracking in multiple vehicle cooperative control
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2004
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/153
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1152&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT renwei consensusseekingformationkeepingandtrajectorytrackinginmultiplevehiclecooperativecontrol
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