Agilicious: Open-source and open-hardware agile quadrotor for vision-based flight.

Journal: Science robotics
Published Date:

Abstract

Autonomous, agile quadrotor flight raises fundamental challenges for robotics research in terms of perception, planning, learning, and control. A versatile and standardized platform is needed to accelerate research and let practitioners focus on the core problems. To this end, we present Agilicious, a codesigned hardware and software framework tailored to autonomous, agile quadrotor flight. It is completely open source and open hardware and supports both model-based and neural network-based controllers. Also, it provides high thrust-to-weight and torque-to-inertia ratios for agility, onboard vision sensors, graphics processing unit (GPU)-accelerated compute hardware for real-time perception and neural network inference, a real-time flight controller, and a versatile software stack. In contrast to existing frameworks, Agilicious offers a unique combination of flexible software stack and high-performance hardware. We compare Agilicious with prior works and demonstrate it on different agile tasks, using both model-based and neural network-based controllers. Our demonstrators include trajectory tracking at up to 5 and 70 kilometers per hour in a motion capture system, and vision-based acrobatic flight and obstacle avoidance in both structured and unstructured environments using solely onboard perception. Last, we demonstrate its use for hardware-in-the-loop simulation in virtual reality environments. Because of its versatility, we believe that Agilicious supports the next generation of scientific and industrial quadrotor research.

Authors

  • Philipp Foehn
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Elia Kaufmann
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Angel Romero
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Robert Penicka
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Sihao Sun
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Leonard Bauersfeld
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Thomas Laengle
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Giovanni Cioffi
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Yunlong Song
    Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Antonio Loquercio
    Robotics and Perception Group, Department of Informatics, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Davide Scaramuzza