Steering Elongate Multi-legged Robots By Modulating Body Undulation Waves
Centipedes exhibit great maneuverability in diverse environments due to their many legs and body-driven control. By leveraging similar morphologies, their robotic counterparts also demonstrate effective terrestrial locomotion. However, the success of these multi-legged robots is largely limited to f...
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Zusammenfassung: | Centipedes exhibit great maneuverability in diverse environments due to their
many legs and body-driven control. By leveraging similar morphologies, their
robotic counterparts also demonstrate effective terrestrial locomotion.
However, the success of these multi-legged robots is largely limited to forward
locomotion; steering is substantially less studied, in part due to the
challenges in coordinating their many body joints. Furthermore, steering
behavior is complex and can include different combinations of desired
rotational/translational displacement. In this paper, we explore steering
strategies in multi-legged robots based on tools derived from geometric
mechanics (GM). We characterize the steering motion in the plane by the
rotation angle, the steering radius, and the heading direction angle. We
identify an effective turning strategy by superimposing two traveling waves in
the lateral body undulation and further explore variations of the "turning
wave" to enable a broad spectrum of steering behaviors. By combining an
amplitude modulation and a phase modulation, we develop a control strategy for
steering behaviors that enables steering with a range of rotation angles (from
0{\deg} to 20{\deg}) and steering radius (from 0.28 to 0.38 body length) while
keeping the heading direction angle close to 0. Lastly, we test our control
framework on an elongate multi-legged robot model to verify the effectiveness
of our proposed strategy. Our work demonstrates the generality of the two-wave
template for effective steering of multi-legged elongate robots. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.01050 |