Bioinspired adaptive visual servoing control for quadrotors.

Journal: Bioinspiration & biomimetics
PMID:

Abstract

Since every flight ends in a landing and every landing is a potential crash, deceleration during landing is one of the most critical flying maneuvers. Here we implement a recently-discovered insect visual-guided landing strategy in which the divergence of optical flow is regulated in a step-wise fashion onboard a quadrotor for the task of visual servoing. This approach was shown to be a powerful tool for understanding challenges encountered by visually-guided flying systems. We found that landing on a relatively small target requires mitigation of the noise with adaptive low-pass filtering, while compensation for the delays introduced by this filter requires open-loop forward accelerations to switch from divergence setpoint. Both implemented solutions are consistent with insect physiological properties. Our study evaluates the challenges of visual-based navigation for flying insects. It highlights the benefits and feasibility of the switching divergence strategy that allows for faster and safer landings in the context of robotics.

Authors

  • Sander T Hazelaar
    Micro Air Laboratory, Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands.
  • Chenyao Wang
    Experimental Zoology Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
  • Christophe De Wagter
    Micro Air Vehicle Laboratory, Control and Simulation, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands.
  • Florian T Muijres
    Experimental Zoology Group, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Netherlands.
  • Guido C H E de Croon
    Delft University of Technology.
  • Matthew Yedutenko
    Micro Air Laboratory, Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands.