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Terrain Aided Localisation of Autonomous Vehicles in Unstructured Environments
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| Institution: | The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia |
|---|---|
| Advisor(s): | Gamini Dissanayake and Hugh Durrant-Whyte |
| Degree: | Ph.D., Mechatronic Engineering |
| Year: | 2003 |
| Volume: | 226 pages |
| ISBN-10: | 1581121776 |
| ISBN-13: | 9781581121773 |
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This thesis is concerned with the theoretical and practical development of reliable and robust localisation algorithms for
autonomous land vehicles operating at high speeds in unstructured,
expansive and harsh environments. Localisation is the ability of a
vehicle to determine its position and orientation within an
operating environment. The need for such a localisation system is
motivated by the requirement of developing autonomous vehicles in
applications such as mining, agriculture and cargo handling. The
main drivers in these applications are for safety, efficiency and
productivity. The approach taken to the localisation problem in
this thesis guarantees that the safety and reliability
requirements imposed by such applications are achieved. The
approach also aims to minimise the engineering or modification of
the environment, such as adding artificial landmarks or other
infrastructure. This is a key driver in the practical
implementation of a localisation algorithm.
In pursuit of these objectives, this thesis makes the following
principal contributions:
1. The development of an Iterative
Closest Point - Extended Kalman Filter (ICP-EKF) algorithm - a
map-based iconic algorithm that utilises measurements from a
scanning laser rangefinder to achieve localisation. The ICP-EKF
algorithm entails the development of a map-building algorithm.
The main attraction of the map-based localisation algorithm is
that it works directly on sensed data and thus does not require
extraction and matching of features. It also explicitly takes
into account the uncertainty associated with measurements and has
the ability to include measurements from a variety of different
sensors.
2. The development and implementation
of an entropy-based metric to evaluate the information content of
measurements. This metric facilitates the augmentation of
landmarks to the ICP-EKF algorithm thus guaranteeing reliable and
robust localisation.
3. The development and adaptation of a
view-invariant Curvature Scale Space (CSS) landmark extraction
algorithm. The algorithm is sufficiently robust to sensor noise
and is capable of reliably detecting and extracting landmarks
that are naturally present in the environment from laser
rangefinder scans.
4. The integration of the
information metric and the CSS and ICP-EKF algorithms to arrive
at a unified localisation framework that uses measurements from
both artificial and natural landmarks, combined with
dead-reckoning sensors, to deliver reliable vehicle position
estimates.
The localisation framework developed is sufficiently generic to
be used on a variety of other autonomous land vehicle systems. This
is demonstrated by its implementation using field data collected
from three different trials on three different vehicles. The first
trial was carried out on a four-wheel drive vehicle in an underground
mine tunnel. The second trial was conducted on a Load-Haul-Dump
(LHD) truck in a test tunnel constructed to emulate an underground
mine. The estimates of the proposed localisation algorithms are
compared to the ground truth provided by an artificial landmark-based
localisation algorithm that uses bearing measurements from a laser.
To demonstrate the feasibility and reliability of both the natural
landmark extraction and localisation algorithms, these are also
implemented on a utility vehicle in an outdoor area within the University's
campus. The results demonstrate the robustness of the proposed localisation
algorithms in producing reliable and accurate position estimates
for autonomous vehicles operating in a variety of unstructured domains.
Rajmohan Madhavan was born in Madras, India, in 1973. He received the Bachelor of Engineering degree (Electrical and Electronics) in 1995 from the College of Engineering, Guindy, Anna University, India and the Master of Engineering (Research) degree (Control and Robotics) in 1997 from the Department of Engineering, The Australian National University, Australia. He received his Ph.D. degree (Field Robotics) in 2001 from the School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering (Department of Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering at the time of completion) from the University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. Since 2001, he has been a research associate with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and is currently a guest researcher with the Intelligent Systems Division of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). His current research interests include autonomous vehicle navigation in large and complex environments, distributed heterogenous sensing and systems and control theory.
Size: 10,178k
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