Indoor Multi-Vehicle Flight Testbed for Fault Detection, Isolation, and Recovery
Author(s) -
Mario Valenti,
Brett Bethke,
Gaston Fiore,
Jonathan P. How,
Éric Féron
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation, and control conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2006-6200
Subject(s) - testbed , fault detection and isolation , computer science , isolation (microbiology) , embedded system , real time computing , automotive engineering , engineering , computer network , artificial intelligence , actuator , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
This paper presents flight tests of a unique indoor, multi-vehicle testbed that was developed to study long duration UAV missions in a controlled environment. This testbed uses real hardware to examine research questions related to single and multi-vehicle health management, such as vehicle failures, refueling, and maintenance. The primary goal of the project is to embed health management into the full UAV planning system, thereby leading to improved overall mission performance, even when using simple aircraft that are prone to failures. The testbed has both aerial and ground vehicles that operate autonomously in a large test region and can be used to execute many different mission scenarios. The success of this testbed is largely related to our choice of vehicles, sensors, and the system’s command and control architecture, which has resulted in a testbed that is very simple to operate. This paper discusses this testbed infrastructure and presents flight test results from some of our most recent singleand multi-vehicle experiments.
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