A parallel hypothesis method of autonomous underwater vehicle navigation
A parallel hypothesis method of autonomous underwater vehicle navigation
Date
2009-06
Authors
LaPointe, Cara Elizabeth Grupe
Linked Authors
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As Published
Date Created
Location
Juan de Fuca Ridge
DOI
10.1575/1912/2853
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Keywords
Vehicles, remotely piloted
Remote submersibles
Remote submersibles
Abstract
This research presents a parallel hypothesis method for autonomous underwater vehicle
navigation that enables a vehicle to expand the operating envelope of existing
long baseline acoustic navigation systems by incorporating information that is not
normally used. The parallel hypothesis method allows the in-situ identification of
acoustic multipath time-of-flight measurements between a vehicle and an external
transponder and uses them in real-time to augment the navigation algorithm during
periods when direct-path time-of-flight measurements are not available. A proof of
concept was conducted using real-world data obtained by the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution Deep Submergence Lab's Autonomous Benthic Explorer (ABE)
and Sentry autonomous underwater vehicles during operations on the Juan de Fuca
Ridge.
This algorithm uses a nested architecture to break the navigation solution down
into basic building blocks for each type of available external information. The algorithm
classifies external information as either line of position or gridded observations.
For any line of position observation, the algorithm generates a multi-modal block
of parallel position estimate hypotheses. The multimodal hypotheses are input into
an arbiter which produces a single unimodal output. If a priori maps of gridded
information are available, they are used within the arbiter structure to aid in the
elimination of false hypotheses. For the proof of concept, this research uses ranges
from a single external acoustic transponder in the hypothesis generation process and
grids of low-resolution bathymetric data from a ship-based multibeam sonar in the
arbitration process.
The major contributions of this research include the in-situ identification of acoustic
multipath time-of-flight measurements, the multiscale utilization of a priori low-resolution
bathymetric data in a high-resolution navigation algorithm, and the design
of a navigation algorithm with a
exible architecture. This flexible architecture allows
the incorporation of multimodal beliefs without requiring a complex mechanism for
real-time hypothesis generation and culling, and it allows the real-time incorporation
of multiple types of external information as they become available in situ into the
overall navigation solution.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2009
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Citation
LaPointe, C. E. G. (2009). A parallel hypothesis method of autonomous underwater vehicle navigation [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/2853