Abstract

Efficient navigation of multiple autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) plays an important role in monitoring underwater and off-shore environments. It has encountered challenges when AUVs work in complex underwater environments. Traditional swarm intelligence (SI) optimization algorithms have limitations such as insufficient path exploration ability, susceptibility to local optima, and difficulty in convergence. To address these issues, we propose an improved multi-objective manta ray foraging optimization (IMMRFO) method, which can improve the accuracy of trajectory planning through a comprehensive three-stage approach. Firstly, basic model sets are established, including a three-dimensional ocean terrain model, a threat source model, the physical constraints of AUV, path smoothing constraints, and spatiotemporal coordination constraints. Secondly, an innovative chaotic mapping technique is introduced to initialize the position of the manta ray population. Moreover, an adaptive rolling factor “S” is introduced from the manta rays’ rolling foraging. This allows the collaborative-vehicle population to jump out of local optima through “collaborative rolling." In the processes of manta ray chain feeding and manta ray spiral feeding, Cauchy reverse learning is integrated to broaden the search space and enhance the global optimization ability. The optimal Pareto front is then obtained using non-dominated sorting. Finally, the position of the manta ray population is mapped to the spatial positions of multi-AUVs, and cubic spline functions are used to optimize the trajectory of multi-AUVs. Through detailed analysis and comparison with five existing multi-objective optimization algorithms, it is found that the IMMRFO algorithm proposed in this paper can significantly reduce the average planned path length by 3.1~9.18 km in the path length target and reduce the average cost by 18.34~321.872 in the cost target. In an actual off-shore measurement process, IMMRFO enables AUVs to effectively bypass obstacles and threat sources, reduce risk costs, and improve mobile surveillance safety.

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