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Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics

Highlighting the control of networked robotic systems, this book synthesizes a unified passivity-based approach to an emerging cross-disciplinary subject. Thanks to this unified approach, readers can access various state-of-the-art research fields by studying only the background foundations associat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hatanaka, Takeshi, Chopra, Nikhil, Fujita, Masayuki, Spong, Mark W
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15171-7
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2015279
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author Hatanaka, Takeshi
Chopra, Nikhil
Fujita, Masayuki
Spong, Mark W
author_facet Hatanaka, Takeshi
Chopra, Nikhil
Fujita, Masayuki
Spong, Mark W
author_sort Hatanaka, Takeshi
collection CERN
description Highlighting the control of networked robotic systems, this book synthesizes a unified passivity-based approach to an emerging cross-disciplinary subject. Thanks to this unified approach, readers can access various state-of-the-art research fields by studying only the background foundations associated with passivity. In addition to the theoretical results and techniques,  the authors provide experimental case studies on testbeds of robotic systems  including networked haptic devices, visual robotic systems,  robotic network systems and visual sensor network systems. The text begins with an introduction to passivity and passivity-based control together with the other foundations needed in this book. The main body of the book consists of three parts. The first examines how passivity can be utilized for bilateral teleoperation and demonstrates the inherent robustness of the passivity-based controller against communication delays. The second part emphasizes passivity’s usefulness for visual feedback control and estimation. Convergence is rigorously proved even when other passive components are interconnected. The passivity approach is also differentiated from other methodologies. The third part presents the unified passivity-based control-design methodology for multi-agent systems. This scheme is shown to be either immediately applicable or easily extendable to the solution of various motion coordination problems including 3-D attitude/pose synchronization, flocking control and cooperative motion estimation. Academic researchers and practitioners working in systems and control and/or robotics will appreciate the potential of the elegant and novel approach to the control of networked robots presented here. The limited background required and the case-study work described also make the text appropriate for and, it is hoped, inspiring to students.
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spelling cern-20152792021-04-21T20:19:31Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-319-15171-7http://cds.cern.ch/record/2015279engHatanaka, TakeshiChopra, NikhilFujita, MasayukiSpong, Mark WPassivity-based control and estimation in networked roboticsEngineeringHighlighting the control of networked robotic systems, this book synthesizes a unified passivity-based approach to an emerging cross-disciplinary subject. Thanks to this unified approach, readers can access various state-of-the-art research fields by studying only the background foundations associated with passivity. In addition to the theoretical results and techniques,  the authors provide experimental case studies on testbeds of robotic systems  including networked haptic devices, visual robotic systems,  robotic network systems and visual sensor network systems. The text begins with an introduction to passivity and passivity-based control together with the other foundations needed in this book. The main body of the book consists of three parts. The first examines how passivity can be utilized for bilateral teleoperation and demonstrates the inherent robustness of the passivity-based controller against communication delays. The second part emphasizes passivity’s usefulness for visual feedback control and estimation. Convergence is rigorously proved even when other passive components are interconnected. The passivity approach is also differentiated from other methodologies. The third part presents the unified passivity-based control-design methodology for multi-agent systems. This scheme is shown to be either immediately applicable or easily extendable to the solution of various motion coordination problems including 3-D attitude/pose synchronization, flocking control and cooperative motion estimation. Academic researchers and practitioners working in systems and control and/or robotics will appreciate the potential of the elegant and novel approach to the control of networked robots presented here. The limited background required and the case-study work described also make the text appropriate for and, it is hoped, inspiring to students.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:20152792015
spellingShingle Engineering
Hatanaka, Takeshi
Chopra, Nikhil
Fujita, Masayuki
Spong, Mark W
Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
title Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
title_full Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
title_fullStr Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
title_full_unstemmed Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
title_short Passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
title_sort passivity-based control and estimation in networked robotics
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15171-7
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2015279
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AT chopranikhil passivitybasedcontrolandestimationinnetworkedrobotics
AT fujitamasayuki passivitybasedcontrolandestimationinnetworkedrobotics
AT spongmarkw passivitybasedcontrolandestimationinnetworkedrobotics