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Distributed Consensus in Multi-vehicle Cooperative Control

Wei Ren, +1 more
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TLDR
In this article, the authors present a survey of the use of consensus algorithms in multi-vehicle cooperative control, including single-and double-integrator dynamical systems, rigid-body attitude dynamics, rendezvous and axial alignment, formation control, deep-space formation flying, fire monitoring and surveillance.
Abstract
The coordinated use of autonomous vehicles has an abundance of potential applications from the domestic to the hazardously toxic. Frequently the communications necessary for the productive interplay of such vehicles may be subject to limitations in range, bandwidth, noise and other causes of unreliability. Information consensus guarantees that vehicles sharing information over a network topology have a consistent view of information critical to the coordination task. Assuming only neighbor-neighbor interaction between vehicles, Distributed Consensus in Multi-vehicle Cooperative Control develops distributed consensus strategies designed to ensure that the information states of all vehicles in a network converge to a common value. This approach strengthens the team, minimizing power consumption and the deleterious effects of range and other restrictions. The monograph is divided into six parts covering introductory, theoretical and experimental material and featuring: an overview of the use of consensus algorithms in cooperative control; consensus algorithms in single- and double-integrator dynamical systems; consensus algorithms for rigid-body attitude dynamics; rendezvous and axial alignment, formation control, deep-space formation flying, fire monitoring and surveillance. Notation drawn from graph and matrix theory and background material on linear and nonlinear system theory are enumerated in six appendices. The authors maintain a website at which can be found a sample simulation and experimental video material associated with experiments in several chapters of this book. Academic control systems researchers and their counterparts in government laboratories and robotics- and aerospace-related industries will find the ideas presented in Distributed Consensus in Multi-vehicle Cooperative Control of great interest. This text will also serve as a valuable support and reference for graduate courses in robotics, and linear and nonlinear control systems.

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Citations
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Consensus of Networked Mechanical Systems With Communication Delays: A Unified Framework

TL;DR: This technical note addresses the consensus problem of networked uncertain mechanical systems which interact on directed graphs containing a spanning tree and are subjected to nonuniform communication delays by establishing a new input-output property of this linear networked system and moreover its convergent property under an external input.
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Second-Order Consensus in Multiagent Systems via Distributed Sliding Mode Control

TL;DR: The new decoupled distributed sliding-mode control (DSMC) is first proposed for second-order consensus in multiagent systems, which finally solves the fundamental unknown problem for sliding- mode control (SMC) design of coupled networked systems.
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IoT-aided robotics applications

TL;DR: The present contribution provides a solid state of the art on the main topics related to IoT-aided robotics services: communication networks, robotics applications in distributed and pervasive environments, semantic-oriented approaches to consensus, and network security.
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Dynamic average consensus under limited control authority and privacy requirements

TL;DR: Kia et al. as mentioned in this paper introduced a continuous-time dynamic average consensus algorithm for networks whose interaction is described by a strongly connected and weight-balanced directed graph, which allows agents to track the average of their dynamic inputs with some steady-state error whose size can be controlled using a design parameter.
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Resilient Flocking for Mobile Robot Teams

TL;DR: This work presents a method that enables resilient formation control for mobile robot teams in the presence of noncooperative (defective or malicious) robots, and demonstrates the use of the framework for resilient flocking, and shows simulation results with groups of holonomic mobile robots.
References
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Information flow and cooperative control of vehicle formations

TL;DR: A Nyquist criterion is proved that uses the eigenvalues of the graph Laplacian matrix to determine the effect of the communication topology on formation stability, and a method for decentralized information exchange between vehicles is proposed.
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Multi-vehicle consensus with a time-varying reference state

TL;DR: This paper first analyzes a consensus algorithm with a constant reference state using graph theoretical tools, then proposes consensus algorithms with a time-varying reference state and shows necessary and sufficient conditions under which consensus is reached on the time-Varyingreference state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consensus strategies for cooperative control of vehicle formations

TL;DR: In this article, a consensus-based formation control strategy is proposed to guarantee accurate formation maintenance in the general case of arbitrary (directed) information flow between vehicles as long as certain mild conditions are satisfied.
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