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Fall 2005 Colloquium Series Jean-Claude
Latombe Professor Jean-Claude Latombe, will talk about Non-Gaited
Motion Planning for Legged Robots on Uneven Terrain. A key constraint
on the motion of a legged robot is maintenance of equilibrium. At each
instant, the reaction forces at contacts with the environment must exactly
compensate for the other forces acting on the robot, e.g., gravity.
In regular terrain, a gaited motion can be pre-computed to satisfy this
constraint. However, in highly irregular terrain, such as rocky outdoor
terrain, broken urban environment after an earthquake, or lunar surface,
the contacts that a robot can possibly make are arbitrarily distributed,
and sometimes sparse. As a result, each motion step is quasi-unique
and its planning requires deliberate reasoning about contacts, friction,
equilibrium, (self-)collision, and torque limits. In this talk, I will
present a motion planning approach developed for legged robots navigating
severely uneven and possibly very steep terrain. I will also describe
several specific techniques that address difficult computational issues
raised by such robots. These techniques have been applied to a prototype
four-limbed rock-climbing robot (LEMUR), a simulated humanoid robot
(HRP-2), and a simulated six-legged lunar vehicle (ATHLETE). Part of
this work is still in progress. IS&T Colloquium Committee Host: Jacqueline LeMoigne, Sign language interpreter upon request: 301-286-8313 |
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| Information Science & Technology Colloquium Series Responsible NASA Official: Paul Hunter Curator: Patrick Healey + Privacy Policy and Important Notices This file was last modified on Friday, 04-Apr-2008 15:06:39 EDT |
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