Abstract
The transportation systems are heading towards increasing autonomy in all domains, and the maritime field makes no exception. The International Maritime Organization has been working on releasing a regulatory framework for Maritime Autonomous Surface Ships (MASS) to keep pace with the technological developments in the field. Autonomous shipping forces the researcher and the designers to face a wide range of scientific challenges, such as navigation decision support systems, collision avoidance algorithms, path planning, navigation and control, sensor data processing and fusion, remote control, and communication, with the final intent of achieving a fully integrated and autonomous worldwide maritime transportation system, where a human-less collaborative conflict resolution could potentially retire the COLREGs. However, the maritime sector will first face a transition period where traditional ships will share the seas and interact with heterogeneous MASS with various autonomous capabilities featuring different and probably incompatible communication protocols. In such a scenario, the COLREGs will still play a primary role in helping the collision avoidance systems resolve conflicts and limiting the degrees of freedom. This paper aims to study the interaction among multiple vessels with autonomous collision avoidance capabilities operating in a close navigation scenario. The ships operate according to a COLREG-compliant collision avoidance algorithm. The paper relies on numerical simulation to systematically investigate different scenarios in which autonomous vessels operate and interact in the presence of fixed obstacles. Results are presented and critically discussed.
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