New strategy allows multiple UAVs to fly in formation

Trophallactic2
Different from the traditional formation control method, the novel trophallaxis network control uses the trophallaxis network to carry out real-time data acquisition and processing. Each UAV obtains a control sequence based on the task commands and its own state, and transfers underlying information to the trophallaxis network. The exchange and sharing of information between UAVs are reinforced by the trophallaxis network. This network mechanism can also be applied to the formation flight of unmanned ground vehicles, satellites and unmanned underwater vehicles. Credit: Science China Press

The autonomous flying of multiple UAVs in formation is an important research area in the aerospace field.

Professor DUAN Haibin and his group members (LUO Qinan and YU Yaxiang) from the Science and Technology in Aircraft Control Laboratory, School of Automation Science and Electrical Engineering, Beihang University set out to tackle this problem. Through five years of innovative research, they investigated the trophallactic mechanism behind social insects and developed a novel trophallaxis network control method for formation flight. They transferred the trophallaxis scenario to the context of a multi-UAV flight scenario and successfully tested and evaluated a new control strategy. Their work, entitled “Trophallaxis network control approach to formation flight of multiple unmanned aerial vehicles”, was published inSCIENCE CHINA Technological Sciences, 2013, Vol. 56(5).

In recent years, formation control of multiple UAVs has become a challenging interdisciplinary research topic, while autonomous formation flight is an important research area in the aerospace field. The main motivation is the wide range of possible military and civilian applications, where UAV formations could provide a low cost and efficient alternative to existing technology. Researchers and clinicians have developed many methods to address the formation problem. Despite all efforts, currently available formation control methods ignore network effects. The UAV group would perform their flight missions according to an existing database received by the navigation system and various sensors. Therefore, the stability of a UAV group is usually affected by the network characteristics, and there is an urgent need for network control strategies with better efficacy.

Trophallactic is a new swarm search algorithm. This new mechanism is based on the trophallactic behavior of social insects, animals and birds, such as ants, bees, wasps, sheep, dogs, sparrows and swallows. Trophallaxis is the exchange of fluid by direct mouth-to-mouth contact. Animal studies revealed that trophallaxis can reinforce the exchange and sharing of information between individual animals. By imitating that behavior and considering the communication requirements of the network control system, a network control method was proposed. The method was derived from the following example. A honeybee that finds the feeder fills its nectar crop with the offered sugar solution, and if the bee meets another bee on its way, there can be trophallactic contact. The higher the metabolic rate of the bee is, the higher this consumption rate will be. The attractive aspect of the trophallaxis mechanism is the ability to incorporate information transfer as a biological process and use global information to generate an optimal control sequence at each time step.

The virtual leader is employed in the formation flight model, and two trophallaxis strategies—the empty call and donation mechanisms—were considered to implement information transfer. In the process of formation, all UAVs, including the virtual leader, have the ability to conduct trophallaxis. The virtual leader sends updated task information and other UAVs update task information during their sampling period through the trophallaxis network.

See Also

Read more . . .

 

The Latest Bing News on:
UAVs to fly in formation
  • 'Robot Marines' In Every Formation: Corps' Robotics Chief Casts Vision
    on May 7, 2024 at 9:27 am

    Intelligent Robotics and Autonomous Systems chief for the USMC lays out just how critical robotics will be in a future fight.

  • The Best Drones for Beginners and Kids in 2024
    on May 4, 2024 at 5:00 pm

    These are the best affordable and easy-to-fly models we've tested ... and the mainstream adoption of drones for aerial imaging. You can find me on Instagram @jamespfisher.

  • Armies need their own drone air force flown by specialist soldiers, study says
    on May 4, 2024 at 2:00 am

    Experience in Ukraine suggests that armies should concentrate drones in special battalions that have the skills pilots to fly them and the programmers to rapidly adapt to constant jamming, according ...

  • Watch Two Jetson One Personal Aircraft Fly in Formation for the First Time
    on April 23, 2024 at 4:18 am

    Two piloted one-seat eVTOLs flew in formation during an exciting premiere by Jetson, opening the road for a wide range of missions in the future ...

  • The Best Drones for 2024
    on April 16, 2024 at 5:01 pm

    Because drones are such pricey propositions, it pays to do your research before buying one. The Best Drones for 2023 We don't focus on racing, industrial, or agricultural aircraft here—our ...

  • Putin Ally Stunned by 'Extremely Dangerous' Ukraine Drones
    on April 11, 2024 at 6:47 am

    large attack drones—known as Baba Yaga drones—with FPV uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs) that fly in pairs at night to make up "entire squadrons" of drones, former Roscosmos head Dmitry Rogozin ...

  • US worried its drones failed to turn tide in Ukraine – WSJ
    on April 9, 2024 at 11:57 pm

    Sometimes, they failed to take off, complete a mission, or come back. US-made UAVs are often unable to fly the declared distances or carry significant payloads. Executives at US drone companies say ...

  • How are drones used in agriculture?
    on February 18, 2024 at 3:54 am

    UAVs can improve precision, efficiency and depth of information. They are cost effective and provide numerous benefits to Indiana’s environment and economy. Purdue Extension is training and equipping ...

  • Time Line of UAVs
    on August 12, 2020 at 9:05 pm

    With their strange silhouettes and awe-inspiring capabilities, today's UAVs, like this Predator, seem to have flown in from the future. But the Predator and the dozen other operational UAVs in the ...

  • The Best Drones for Photos and Video
    on March 8, 2019 at 1:34 pm

    This easy-to-fly drone provides a 6K camera and 40 minutes of flight time, and unlike DJI drones, it has no known security concerns. But the video quality isn’t as crisp or colorful. We’ve ...

The Latest Google Headlines on:
UAVs to fly in formation

[google_news title=”” keyword=”UAVs to fly in formation” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

The Latest Bing News on:
Swarming UAVs
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Swarming UAVs

[google_news title=”” keyword=”swarming UAVs” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
Scroll To Top