Embedded Motion Control 2013/Goal: Difference between revisions
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An intermediate review will be held on September 25th, during the corridor competition. During this challenge the students have to let the robot drive through a corridor and then take the first exit. The precise location of this exit will not be given in advance. Some facts: | An intermediate review will be held on September 25th, during the corridor competition. During this challenge the students have to let the robot drive through a corridor and then take the first exit. The precise location of this exit will not be given in advance. Some facts: | ||
[[File:corridor_example.jpg|200px]] | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
* The exit can be either left or right | * The exit can be either left or right | ||
* It is not known beforehand how far the exit is located from the start (somewhere between 1 and 10 meters) | * It is not known beforehand how far the exit is located from the start (somewhere between 1 and 10 meters) |
Revision as of 15:40, 18 September 2013
The goal of the assignment is to get the real-time concepts in embedded software design operational.
The concrete task that has to be solved is to let the PICO robot find his way out of a maze. The final demonstration by each participating group of 4-5 students will be performed during a contest, the winner of which is the group that exits the maze in the shortest amount of time. To prepare for this competition the following guidelines have to be considered:
- to test with PICO and to prepare for the final contest, a simulator will be made available that mimics the in and outputs to the real robot. Specifics of this simulator will be presented in the first lecture on September 4th
- the maze of the final competition will be constructed just before the competition. The maze presented in the simulator is therefore different from the real one used in the final contest.
- both on the real and simulated PICO robot, three sources of sensor information will be available to perceive the environment and to derive the state of the robot:
- laserdata provided by the forward pointing laser scanner,
- images captured by the monocular camera,
- odometry provided by the base controller
- the robot can be actuated by sending information to the base controller
- during the final contest, it is highly imperative that the PICO robot refrains from colliding with the walls in the maze. Colliding with the walls will result in severe time-penalties.
- the walls of the maze will contain several types of pointers to the exit, which can potentially help PICO to speed up execution of the task.
Corridor Competition
An intermediate review will be held on September 25th, during the corridor competition. During this challenge the students have to let the robot drive through a corridor and then take the first exit. The precise location of this exit will not be given in advance. Some facts:
- The exit can be either left or right
- It is not known beforehand how far the exit is located from the start (somewhere between 1 and 10 meters)
- The walls are approximately parallel to each other
- The distance between the walls is not known in advance, but will be reasonable (somewhere between 0.5 and 1.5 meters)
- PICO will start with its laser range finder between the walls
- PICO will be approximately facing the end of the corridor. (Notice: approximately, so don't just drive forward for n seconds!)
- You have finished the assignment if PICO did not drive into walls, took the correct turn, the castor wheels are outside the corridor and the robot has stopped moving
- Hitting the wall will result in 0 points!
During the final contest, the groups are expected to give a short (5 minute) presentation about their progress and design decisions. During the corridor competition no presentation is expected.