Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
743593 Optics and Lasers in Engineering 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The system is capable of increasing the velocity for digital obstacle detection in mobile robot application.•Automatic search of obstacles within the scene under interest, and precise measurements of only edges of obstacles.•Simulations permit optimal angular step values to classify the real scene and selectively describe obstacles inside.•Using Neural Network training results permits rectification of step values for scanning small sectors of interest inside all frames.•Obtained simulation results were used as requisites for original MET design to provide a variable step in practice.

The problem of 3D TVS slow functioning caused by constant small scanning step becomes its solution in the presented research. It can be achieved by combined scanning step application for the fast search of n obstacles in unknown surroundings. Such a problem is of keynote importance in automatic robot navigation. To maintain a reasonable speed robots must detect dangerous obstacles as soon as possible, but all known scanners able to measure distances with sufficient accuracy are unable to do it in real time. So, the related technical task of the scanning with variable speed and precise digital mapping only for selected spatial sectors is under consideration. A wide range of simulations in MATLAB 7.12.0 of several variants of hypothetic scenes with variable n obstacles in each scene (including variation of shapes and sizes) and scanning with incremented angle value (0.6° up to 15°) is provided. The aim of such simulation was to detect which angular values of interval still permit getting the maximal information about obstacles without undesired time losses. Three of such local maximums were obtained in simulations and then rectified by application of neuronal network formalism (Levenberg–Marquradt Algorithm). The obtained results in its turn were applied to MET (Micro-Electro-mechanical Transmission) design for practical realization of variable combined step scanning on an experimental prototype of our previously known laser scanner.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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