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Equitable Persistent Coverage of Non-Convex Environments with Graph-Based Planning

Authors :
Palacios-Gasós, José Manuel
Tardioli, Danilo
Montijano, Eduardo
Sagüés, Carlos
Source :
Palacios-Gasos JM, Tardioli D, Montijano E, Sagues C. Equitable persistent coverage of non-convex environments with graph-based planning. The International Journal of Robotics Research. 2019;38(14):1674-1694
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In this paper we tackle the problem of persistently covering a complex non-convex environment with a team of robots. We consider scenarios where the coverage quality of the environment deteriorates with time, requiring to constantly revisit every point. As a first step, our solution finds a partition of the environment where the amount of work for each robot, weighted by the importance of each point, is equal. This is achieved using a power diagram and finding an equitable partition through a provably correct distributed control law on the power weights. Compared to other existing partitioning methods, our solution considers a continuous environment formulation with non-convex obstacles. In the second step, each robot computes a graph that gathers sweep-like paths and covers its entire partition. At each planning time, the coverage error at the graph vertices is assigned as weights of the corresponding edges. Then, our solution is capable of efficiently finding the optimal open coverage path through the graph with respect to the coverage error per distance traversed. Simulation and experimental results are presented to support our proposal.<br />Comment: This is the accepted version an already published manuscript. See journal reference for details

Subjects

Subjects :
Computer Science - Robotics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Palacios-Gasos JM, Tardioli D, Montijano E, Sagues C. Equitable persistent coverage of non-convex environments with graph-based planning. The International Journal of Robotics Research. 2019;38(14):1674-1694
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2401.13614
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0278364919882082