Rayon Techniques et procédés spécifiques
Bio-inspired flying robots : experimental synthesis of autonomous indoors flyers

Fiche technique

Format : Cartonné
Nb de pages : XIV-205 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 17cm X 25cm
ISBN : 978-1-4200-6684-5
EAN : 9781420066845

Bio-inspired flying robots

experimental synthesis of autonomous indoors flyers


Collection(s) | Engineering Sciences
Paru le
Cartonné XIV-205 pages

Quatrième de couverture

This book demonstrates how bio-inspiration can lead to fully autonomous flying robots without relaying on external aids. Most existing aerial robots fly in open skies, far from obstacles, and rely on external beacons - mainly GPS - to localize and navigate. However, these robots are not able to fly at low altitude or in confined environments, and yet this poses absolutely no difficulty to insects. Indeed, flying insects display efficient flight control capabilities in complex environments despite their limited weight and relatively tiny brain size.

From sensor suite to control strategies, the literature on flying insects is reviewed from an engineering perspective in order to extract useful principles that are then applied to the synthesis of artificial indoor flyers. Artificial evolution is also utilized to search for alternative control systems and behaviours that match the constraints of small flying robots. Specifically, the basic sensory modalities of insects, vision, gyroscopes and airflow sense, are applied to develop navigation controllers for indoor flying robots. These robots are capable of mapping sensor information onto actuator commands in real time to maintain altitude, stabilize the course and avoid obstacles. The most prominent result of this novel approach is a 10-gram microflyer capable of fully autonomous operation in an office-sized room using fly-inspired vision, inertial and airspeed sensors.

This book is intended for all those interested in the autonomous robotics, working both in academic and industrial settings.

Biographie

Jean-Christophe Zufferey is research scientist and lecturer in the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems, at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland. His research interests lie in aerial, bio-inspired and evolutionary robotics. His 2005 Ph.D. thesis in Autonomous Robotics was recognized with the ABB 2006 award for "a pioneering contribution to the science and technology of autonomous flying microrobots inspired by the biology of flying insects". He has co-authored more than twenty peer-reviewed journal and conference papers and is very active on the international conference circuit, having co-organised the first international symposium on Flying Insects and Robots in Monte Verità, Switzerland (2007). Since 2003, he is the main organizer of the EPFL Flying Robot Contest. In addition, Dr. Zufferey is co-founder of DIDEL SA, an EPFL spin-off company involved in educational robotics and ultra-light R/C indoor flyers. His interest in flight extends into his personal life: Jean-Christophe holds a private license for gliders and motor airplanes and regularly practices mountain landing and aerial aerobatics.

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