Abstract

For unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), landing on a moving vehicle robustly is an open challenge, especially under cluttered surroundings with the presence of unknown obstacles. Those undesired environmental factors could induce collisions and thus affect flight safety significantly. Currently, there are few solutions to address such a challenge. In this paper, we propose a systematic autonomous landing scheme that enables the robust autonomous landing performance of a quadrotor UAV. The proposed scheme integrates target detection, state estimation, trajectory planning, and landing control. The position and attitude information of the target ground vehicle and the test quadrotor are estimated by the onboard vision system and GPS. In order to detect landing markers at different altitudes, a particular landing pad with an Apriltag bundle is implemented. As a typical aerial–terrestrial cooperation system, the trajectory planner of the quadrotor updates continuously to avoid obstacles via real-time sensing and re-planning. A finite state machine is used to label the current flight status and triggers the control laws correspondingly. The effectiveness of the proposed method has been validated in a high-fidelity simulator with environmental obstacles.

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