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Flocking of Multi-Agents With a Virtual Leader

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TLDR
Modification to the Olfati-Saber algorithm is proposed and it is shown that the resulting algorithm enables the asymptotic tracking of the virtual leader.
Abstract
All agents being informed and the virtual leader traveling at a constant velocity are the two critical assumptions seen in the recent literature on flocking in multi-agent systems. Under these assumptions, Olfati-Saber in a recent IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control paper proposed a flocking algorithm which by incorporating a navigational feedback enables a group of agents to track a virtual leader. This paper revisits the problem of multi-agent flocking in the absence of the above two assumptions. We first show that, even when only a fraction of agents are informed, the Olfati-Saber flocking algorithm still enables all the informed agents to move with the desired constant velocity, and an uninformed agent to also move with the same desired velocity if it can be influenced by the informed agents from time to time during the evolution. Numerical simulation demonstrates that a very small group of the informed agents can cause most of the agents to move with the desired velocity and the larger the informed group is the bigger portion of agents will move with the desired velocity. In the situation where the virtual leader travels with a varying velocity, we propose modification to the Olfati-Saber algorithm and show that the resulting algorithm enables the asymptotic tracking of the virtual leader. That is, the position and velocity of the center of mass of all agents will converge exponentially to those of the virtual leader. The convergent rate is also given.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Overview of Recent Progress in the Study of Distributed Multi-Agent Coordination

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed some main results and progress in distributed multi-agent coordination, focusing on papers published in major control systems and robotics journals since 2006 and proposed several promising research directions along with some open problems that are deemed important for further investigations.
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An Overview of Recent Progress in the Study of Distributed Multi-agent Coordination

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed some main results and progress in distributed multi-agent coordination, focusing on papers published in major control systems and robotics journals since 2006, and proposed several promising research directions along with some open problems that are deemed important for further investigations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed Coordinated Tracking With Reduced Interaction via a Variable Structure Approach

TL;DR: A distributed coordinated tracking problem is solved via a variable structure approach when there exists a dynamic virtual leader who is a neighbor of only a subset of a group of followers, all followers have only local interaction, and only partial measurements of the states of the virtual leader and the followers are available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brief paper: Adaptive second-order consensus of networked mobile agents with nonlinear dynamics

TL;DR: Under the assumption that the initial network is connected, this work introduces local adaptation strategies for both the weights on the velocity navigational feedback and the velocity coupling strengths that enable all agents to synchronize with the virtual leader even when only one agent is informed, without requiring any knowledge of the agent dynamics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control Principles of Complex Networks

TL;DR: Recent advances on the controllability and the control of complex networks are reviewed, exploring the intricate interplay between a system's structure, captured by its network topology, and the dynamical laws that govern the interactions between the components.
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