Abstract
Positioning of underwater robots in congested and enclosed spaces
remains unsolved for field operations. Well existing field ready systems
are generally more suited to use in to use in large, open marine
environments. In enclosed and congested environments, which are common
in industrial settings, existing systems suffer from a mixture of
issues, including: poor coverage, reliance on added infrastructure and
the need for feature rich environments. Accurate and readily deployable
positioning is a prerequisite for performing repeatable autonomous
missions and therefore, until now, there has been a technological
bottleneck in such environments. The Collaborative Aquatic Positioning
system presented in this paper uses a mixture of collaborative robotics
and sensor fusion to solve the problem. The proposed positioning system
is deployed in a large water tank and repeatable autonomous missions are
performed using the system’s position measurement for real-time
feedback. Experimental results show that the system can achieve a
Euclidean distance Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of 70 mm while
operating in real-time. The system enables almost complete coverage of
the body of water in large pools without requiring fixed infrastructure,
lengthy calibration, or feature rich environments. The Collaborative
Aquatic Positioning system builds upon recent advances in mobile robot
sensing and a recently developed leader follower control system to
provide a step-change in positioning capability for real-world,
high-precision autonomous underwater navigation.