Abstract

The present study deals with the risky and daunting tasks of flying and landing in non-stationary environments. Using a two Degree-Of-Freedom (DOF) tethered micro-air vehicle (MAV), we show the benefits of an autopilot dealing with a variable - the flow - which depends directly on two relative variables, the groundspeed and the groundheight. The micro-helicopter was shown to follow the ups and downs of a rotating platform that was also oscillated vertically. At no time did the MAV know in terms of ground height whether it was approaching the moving ground or whether the ground itself was rising to it dangerously. Nor did it know whether its current groundspeed was caused only by its forward thrust or whether it was partly due to the ground moving backwards or forwards. Furthermore, the MAV was shown to land safely on a platform set into motion along two directions, vertical and horizontal. This paper extends to non-stationary environments a former approach that introduced the principle of optic flow regulation for altitude control. Whereas in the former approach no requirement was set on the robot's landing target, the target's elevation angle was used here in a second feedback loop that gradually altered the robot's pitch and therefore its airspeed, leading to smooth landing in the vicinity of the target. Whether dealing with terrain following or landing, the MAV followed followed appropriately the unpredictable changes in the environment although it had no explicit knowledge of groundheight and groundspeed. The MAV did not make use of any rangefinders or velocimeters and was simply equipped with a 2-gram vision-based autopilot.

Highlights

  • Many flying animal such as insects are able to fly over non-stationary surfaces such as heavy sea, as well as to land delicately on dancing twigs, flowers blown by the wind, or floating objects in water streams

  • This paper extends to non-stationary environments a former approach that introduced the principle of optic flow regulation for an altitude control system [1, 2]

  • In the first part of this study, we established that the ‘optic flow regulator” we had developed in former studies allows a tethered rotorcraft to deal with non-stationary environments

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Summary

Introduction

Many flying animal such as insects are able to fly over non-stationary surfaces such as heavy sea, as well as to land delicately on dancing twigs, flowers blown by the wind, or floating objects in water streams. In recent military developments (as reported by some press releases and not published exhaustively in scientific conferences or journals so far) additional sensors based, e.g., on differential GPS, seem to have been placed on the landing platform itself In this case, the classical autopilot used the following sequence to make the aircraft land on the moving platform [4, 5]:.

Biorobotics Contribution
Optic Flow-based Visual Guidance Above an Unsteady Platform
Aerial Robot
Test-Rig
Simplified Heave Dynamics of a Free-Flying Rotorcraft
The Influence of the Inertial Forces on the Tethered Aerial Robot
Heave Dynamics of a Tethered Aerial Robot
Flight Parameters
Strategy and Results
Elevation Angle Feedback Loop
Experimental Landing on the Moving Platform
Conclusion
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