Abstract

This paper investigates the problem of cooperative standoff tracking using multiple fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) with control input constraints. In order to achieve accurate moving target tracking in the presence of unknown background wind, a coordinated standoff target tracking algorithm is proposed. The objective of the research is to steer multiple UAVs to fly a circular orbit around a moving target with prescribed intervehicle angular spacing. To achieve this goal, two control laws are proposed, including relative range regulation and space phase separation. On one hand, a heading rate control law based on a Lyapunov guidance vector field is proposed. The convergence analysis shows that the UAVs can asymptotically converge to a desired circular orbit around the target, regardless of their initial position and heading. Through a rigorous theoretical proof, it is concluded that the command signal of the proposed heading rate controller will not violate the boundary constraint on the heading rate. On the other hand, a temporal phase is introduced to represent the phase separation and avoid discontinuity of the wrapped space phase angle. On this basis, a speed controller is developed to achieve equal phase separation. The proposed airspeed controller meets the requirements of the airspeed constraint. Furthermore, to improve the robustness of the aircraft during target tracking, an estimator is developed to estimate the composition velocity of the unknown wind and target motion. The proposed estimator uses the offset vector between the UAV’s actual flight path and the desired orbit, which is defined by the Lyapunov guidance vector field, to estimate the composition velocity. The stability of the estimator is proved. Simulations are conducted under different scenarios to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed cooperative standoff target tracking algorithm. The simulation results indicate that the temporal-phase-based speed controller can achieve a fast convergence speed and small phase separation error. Additionally, the composition velocity estimator exhibits a fast response speed and high estimation accuracy.

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