Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments

Most micro air vehicles rely heavily on reliable GPS measurements for proper estimation and control, and therefore struggle in GPS-degraded environments. When GPS is not available, the global position and heading of the vehicle is unobservable. This dissertation establishes the theoretical and pract...

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Main Author: Wheeler, David Orton
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6609
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7609&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-76092019-05-16T03:03:09Z Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments Wheeler, David Orton Most micro air vehicles rely heavily on reliable GPS measurements for proper estimation and control, and therefore struggle in GPS-degraded environments. When GPS is not available, the global position and heading of the vehicle is unobservable. This dissertation establishes the theoretical and practical advantages of a relative navigation framework for MAV navigation in GPS-degraded environments. This dissertation explores how the consistency, accuracy, and stability of current navigation approaches degrade during prolonged GPS dropout and in the presence of heading uncertainty. Relative navigation (RN) is presented as an alternative approach that maintains observability by working with respect to a local coordinate frame. RN is compared with several current estimation approaches in a simulation environment and in hardware experiments. While still subject to global drift, RN is shown to produce consistent state estimates and stable control. Estimating relative states requires unique modifications to current estimation approaches. This dissertation further provides a tutorial exposition of the relative multiplicative extended Kalman filter, presenting how to properly ensure observable state estimation while maintaining consistency. The filter is derived using both inertial and body-fixed state definitions and dynamics. Finally, this dissertation presents a series of prolonged flight tests, demonstrating the effectiveness of the relative navigation approach for autonomous GPS-degraded MAV navigation in varied, unknown environments. The system is shown to utilize a variety of vision sensors, work indoors and outdoors, run in real-time with onboard processing, and not require special tuning for particular sensors or environments. Despite leveraging off-the-shelf sensors and algorithms, the flight tests demonstrate stable front-end performance with low drift. The flight tests also demonstrate the onboard generation of a globally consistent, metric, and localized map by identifying and incorporating loop-closure constraints and intermittent GPS measurements. With this map, mission objectives are shown to be autonomously completed. 2017-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6609 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7609&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive GPS degradation GPS denied navigation state estimation observability multiplicative extended Kalman filter error state sensor fusion vision-aided INS consistency robocentric multirotor micro air vehicle indoor flight outdoor flight simultaneous localization and mapping place recognition loop closure pose graph optimization obstacle avoidance visual odometry Electrical and Computer Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic GPS degradation
GPS denied
navigation
state estimation
observability
multiplicative extended Kalman filter
error state
sensor fusion
vision-aided INS
consistency
robocentric
multirotor
micro air vehicle
indoor flight
outdoor flight
simultaneous localization and mapping
place recognition
loop closure
pose graph optimization
obstacle avoidance
visual odometry
Electrical and Computer Engineering
spellingShingle GPS degradation
GPS denied
navigation
state estimation
observability
multiplicative extended Kalman filter
error state
sensor fusion
vision-aided INS
consistency
robocentric
multirotor
micro air vehicle
indoor flight
outdoor flight
simultaneous localization and mapping
place recognition
loop closure
pose graph optimization
obstacle avoidance
visual odometry
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Wheeler, David Orton
Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments
description Most micro air vehicles rely heavily on reliable GPS measurements for proper estimation and control, and therefore struggle in GPS-degraded environments. When GPS is not available, the global position and heading of the vehicle is unobservable. This dissertation establishes the theoretical and practical advantages of a relative navigation framework for MAV navigation in GPS-degraded environments. This dissertation explores how the consistency, accuracy, and stability of current navigation approaches degrade during prolonged GPS dropout and in the presence of heading uncertainty. Relative navigation (RN) is presented as an alternative approach that maintains observability by working with respect to a local coordinate frame. RN is compared with several current estimation approaches in a simulation environment and in hardware experiments. While still subject to global drift, RN is shown to produce consistent state estimates and stable control. Estimating relative states requires unique modifications to current estimation approaches. This dissertation further provides a tutorial exposition of the relative multiplicative extended Kalman filter, presenting how to properly ensure observable state estimation while maintaining consistency. The filter is derived using both inertial and body-fixed state definitions and dynamics. Finally, this dissertation presents a series of prolonged flight tests, demonstrating the effectiveness of the relative navigation approach for autonomous GPS-degraded MAV navigation in varied, unknown environments. The system is shown to utilize a variety of vision sensors, work indoors and outdoors, run in real-time with onboard processing, and not require special tuning for particular sensors or environments. Despite leveraging off-the-shelf sensors and algorithms, the flight tests demonstrate stable front-end performance with low drift. The flight tests also demonstrate the onboard generation of a globally consistent, metric, and localized map by identifying and incorporating loop-closure constraints and intermittent GPS measurements. With this map, mission objectives are shown to be autonomously completed.
author Wheeler, David Orton
author_facet Wheeler, David Orton
author_sort Wheeler, David Orton
title Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments
title_short Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments
title_full Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments
title_fullStr Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments
title_full_unstemmed Relative Navigation of Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Degraded Environments
title_sort relative navigation of micro air vehicles in gps-degraded environments
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6609
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7609&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT wheelerdavidorton relativenavigationofmicroairvehiclesingpsdegradedenvironments
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