Abstract

This work investigates the cooperative formation control problem of unmanned surface vehicle-remotely operated vehicles (USV-ROVs) subject to uncertainties under deceptive attacks. In the control design, with the utilization of the desired formation as well as the geometric position between USV and ROVs, a geometric transformation approach is developed and a geometric constraint relationship of governing formation positions is derived. Under the terminal sliding mode control (TSMC) design framework, a novel terminal sliding surface is crafted to circumvent the singularity issue. To further bolster robustness, using the sliding mode damper concept, a variable damping reaching law is devised. To refrain from the effectiveness of attacks and uncertainties, the adaptive technique is integrated into the TSMC framework. To save the communication resources, an event-triggering mechanism is established between the distributed controller and ROVs. Then, an event-triggered adaptive finite-time cooperative formation control scheme is developed for the USV-ROVs. The Lyapunov theory analysis shows that the cooperative formation control issue of USV-ROVs is realized and the deceptive attack can be suppressed efficaciously. The simulation, comparison, and quantitative analysis demonstrate the relative effectiveness and superiority of the developed scheme.

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