Abstract

Vision-based sensors such as LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) are adopted in the SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) system. In the 16-beam LiDAR aided SLAM system, due to the difficulty of object detection by sparse laser data, neither the grid-based nor feature point-based solution can avoid the interference of moving objects. In an urban environment, the pole-like objects are common, invariant and have distinguishing characteristics. Therefore, it is suitable to bring more robust and reliable positioning results as auxiliary information in the process of vehicle positioning and navigation. In this work, we proposed a scheme of a SLAM system using a GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System), IMU (Inertial Measurement Unit) and LiDAR sensor using the position of pole-like objects as the features for SLAM. The scheme combines a traditional preprocessing method and a small scale artificial neural network to extract the pole-like objects in environment. Firstly, the threshold-based method is used to extract the pole-like object candidates from the point cloud, and then, the neural network is applied for training and inference to obtain pole-like objects. The result shows that the accuracy and recall rate are sufficient to provide stable observation for the following SLAM process. After extracting the poles from the LiDAR point cloud, their coordinates are added to the feature map, and the nonlinear optimization of the front end is carried out by utilizing the distance constraints corresponding to the pole coordinates; then, the heading angle and horizontal plane translation are estimated. The ground feature points are used to enhance the elevation, pitch and roll angle accuracy. The performance of the proposed navigation system is evaluated through field experiments by checking the position drift and attitude errors during multiple two-min mimic GNSS outages without additional IMU motion constrain such as NHC (Nonholonomic Constrain). The experimental results show that the performance of the proposed scheme is superior to that of the conventional feature point grid-based SLAM with the same back end, especially in congested crossroads where slow-moving vehicles are surrounded and pole-like objects are rich in the environment. The mean plane position error during two-min GNSS outages was reduced by 38.5%, and the root mean square error was reduced by 35.3%. Therefore, the proposed pole-like feature-based GNSS/IMU/LiDAR SLAM system can fuse condensed information from those sensors effectively to mitigate positioning and orientation errors, even in a short-time GNSS denied environment.

Highlights

  • An automatic driving system is an unremitting pursuit of intelligent vehicles, and the navigation ability is the essential guarantee for vehicles to successfully complete the automatic driving task safely and accurately

  • We propose and evaluate the navigation and global localization scheme of automatic driving vehicles by using the pole-like objects in an urban environment, such as tree trunks, light poles and traffic poles, as auxiliary information without using a prebuild map

  • As the velocity of the vehicle was about 10 m/s and the maximum range of Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) detection was about 100 m, a 10-s interval was set to get a sequence of LiDAR frames

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Summary

Introduction

An automatic driving system is an unremitting pursuit of intelligent vehicles, and the navigation ability is the essential guarantee for vehicles to successfully complete the automatic driving task safely and accurately. A Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS), which includes a GPS Positioning System), BDS (BeiDou Navigation Satellite System) [1,2], GLONASS and Galileo, can provide the position information of the target for their users. In urban environment, due to the existence of buildings and viaducts, low-quality observations, i.e., multi-path signals and NLOS (Non-Line-Of-Sight) signals, are frequently obtained, causing unreliable GNSS positioning results. Some processes [3] can be absorbed in the navigation solution to improve the positioning, the precision is still insufficient for automatic driving. In the widely used integrated navigation scheme, data from GNSS and Inertial

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