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Improvement on Navigation PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chin Fung Lai   
Sunday, 30 January 2005

There are a few navigation technologies that are under development, e.g. GPS Self-Calibrating Pseudolite Arrays by Stanford University Aerospace Robotics Laboratory (ARL) , landmark-based and star tracking navigation system by Carnegie Mellon University. One of the ways to have an accurate and efficient navigation system is to set up a full GPS system around Mars. However this is very difficult and expensive, an alternative way is to have pseudolites (pseudo-satellites), which use small ground-based GPS transmitter instead of satellites. The main problem associated with using pseudolites is that it required centimetre-level accuracy of the pseudolites' position which is extremely difficulty to achieve when placing them on another planet. Hence ARL has come up with Self-Calibrating Pseudolite Array (SCPA) to overcome this problem.

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Fig 2: SCPA architecture
The idea of SCPA is to create an array with a few pseudolites and receivers which uses GPS signal to determine their own location relative to the others. ARL shows in their experiments that the rovers can travel within the array with centimeter level of accuracy. We can see from the diagram the architecture of the SCPA, the ability of the Wireless Ethernet and notebook used in the experiment can be built on to the main station on the planet or the rover itself. As we can see, the rover is limited within the array where the pseudolites covered. To allow the rover to have a longer range, the pseudolites can be migrated on to server rovers.
This method is being developed by ARL called the Leapfrogging Multi-Rover Navigation . The concept is to have four rovers mounted with transceivers working together with leap-frog mode navigation. This is to allow one rovers to move at one time and its relative position can be obtained from the other three stationary rovers. The movement of a complete cycle of this movement is shown on the diagram below. ARL is able to achieve a drifting error (caused by the geometric errors which accumulate) of less then 0.5% of the total distance traveled (40 m). A video clip of the real rovers' demonstration on this method can be seen on ARL website .
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This method results in more mobility and flexibility of the rover. However, the algorithm is much more complex and it required more than one rover. In the experiment, four rovers are used, if for example one rover fails, can the other three rovers still operate? The answer is that it can achieve the same level of accuracy with at least two stationary rovers. That is to say this navigation system will still works with at least 3 rovers working.

Follow this link to view the video of ARL testing the system: http://arl.stanford.edu/~rover/videos/leapfrog_ames.mpg

Last Updated ( Monday, 31 January 2005 )