Abstract

In this paper, we introduce a novel coordination strategy for a group of autonomous robots tasked with estimating the source term of an airborne chemical release. This strategy integrates distributed Bayesian filtering, coverage control, information-theoretic sampling, and proximity constraint handling, forming an efficient and fully distributed coordination protocol. In the proposed framework, each robot employs a consensus-based belief update rule, allowing it to adaptively incorporate information from neighbouring robots to ensure a unified belief across the network. The overall control action is designed to maximise information gain while maintaining network connectivity and minimising communication requirements during movement between sampling points. Extensive numerical simulations are conducted to analyse the performance of the proposed strategy, which demonstrate significant performance improvements compared to popular filtering practices and advanced path-planning strategies. The simulation study is also designed to substantiate the design choices of the proposed coordination strategy and to emphasise its advantages.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call