Opportunities and challenges with autonomous micro aerial vehicles (original) (raw)

We survey the recent work on micro unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), a fast-growing field in robotics, outlining the opportunities for research and applications, along with the scientific and technological challenges. Micro-UAVs can operate in three-dimensional environments, explore and map multi-story buildings, manipulate and transport objects, and even perform such tasks as assembly. While fixed-base industrial robots were the main focus in the first two decades of robotics, and mobile robots enabled most of the significant advances during the next two decades, it is likely that UAVs, and particularly micro-UAVs, will provide a major impetus for the next phase of education, research, and development.

Vision-Controlled Micro Flying Robots

2016

utonomous microhelicopters will soon play a major role in tasks like search and rescue, environment monitoring, security surveillance, and inspection. If they are further realized in small scale, they can also be used in narrow outdoor and indoor environments and represent only a limited risk for people. However, for such operations, navigating based only on global positioning system (GPS) information is not sufficient. Fully autonomous operation in cities or other dense environments requires microhelicopters to fly at low altitudes, where GPS signals are often shadowed, or indoors and to actively explore unknown environments while avoiding collisions and creating maps. This involves a number of challenges on all levels of helicopter design, perception, actuation, control, and navigation, which still have to be solved. The Swarm of Micro Flying Robots (SFLY) project was a European Union–funded project with the goal of creating a swarm of vision-controlled microaerial vehicles (MAVs)...

Towards Scalable Visual Navigation of Micro Aerial Vehicles

2016

Micro Aerial Vehicles (MAVs) have built a formidable résumé by making themselves useful in a number of important applications, from disaster scene surveillance and package delivery to robots used in aerial imaging, architecture and construction. The most important benefit of using such lightweight MAVs is that it allows the capability to fly at high speeds in space-constrained environments. While autonomous operations in structured motion-capture systems has has been well studied in general, enabling resource-efficient, persistent navigation methods for long-term autonomy in unstructured and dynamic environments is still an open problem in current robotics research. In this thesis, we take a small step in this direction and present a scalable framework for robust visual navigation of MAVs in the wild. Our first contribution is a toolbox of approaches for perception, planning and control of agile, low-cost MAVs in cluttered urban and natural outdoor environments, based on a monocular...

Design and Development of Micro Aerial Vehicles and Their Cooperative Systems for Target Search and Tracking

International Journal of Micro Air Vehicles, 2009

This paper presents Micro Aerial Vehicles (MAVs) and their cooperative systems including Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGVs) and a Base Station (BS), which were primarily designed for the 1st US-Asian Demonstration and Assessment on Micro-Aerial and Unmanned Ground Vehicle Technology (MAV08). The MAVs are of coaxial design, which imparts mechanical stability both outdoor and indoor while obeying a 30 cm size constraint. They have carbon fibre frames for weight reduction allowing microcontrollers and various sensors to be mounted on-board for tele-operated and waypoint control. The UGVs are similarly equipped to perform their own search and tracking mission but also to support the MAVs by relaying data between the MAVs and the BS when they are out of direct range. The BS monitors the vehicles and their environment and navigates them autonomously or with humans in the loop through the developed GUI. The ability of the MAV in flight was demonstrated by showing continuous hovering. The effi...

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