90.1SYMay 30
Scalar-Measurement Attitude Estimation on $\mathbf{SO}(3)$ with Bias CompensationAlessandro Melis, Tarek Bouazza, Hassan Alnahhal et al.
Attitude estimation methods typically rely on full vector measurements from inertial sensors such as accelerometers and magnetometers. This paper shows that reliable estimation can also be achieved using only scalar measurements, which naturally arise either as components of vector readings or as independent constraints from other sensing modalities. We propose nonlinear deterministic observers on $\mathbf{SO}(3)$ that incorporate gyroscope bias compensation and guarantee uniform local exponential stability under suitable observability conditions. A key feature of the framework is its robustness to partial sensing: accurate estimation is maintained even when only a subset of vector components is available. Experimental validation on the BROAD dataset confirms consistent performance across progressively reduced measurement configurations, with estimation errors remaining small even under severe information loss. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to establish fundamental observability results showing that two scalar measurements under suitable excitation suffice for attitude estimation, and that three are enough in the static case. These results position scalar-measurement-based observers as a practical and reliable alternative to conventional vector-based approaches.
0.6SYMay 13
Relative Pose-Velocity Estimation Using Dual IMU Measurements and Relative Position SensingAlessandro Melis, Tarek Bouazza, Soulaimane Berkane et al.
This paper addresses the problem of estimating the relative pose (position and orientation) and velocity of a vehicle with respect to a moving target, where both are equipped with Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs), assuming the availability of relative position or bearing measurements. The body-target relative dynamics are formulated on $\mathbf{SE}_2(3)$ and recast into a linear time-varying (LTV) model in the ambient space $\mathbb{R}^{15}$, on which a deterministic Riccati observer is designed. We analyze the uniform observability (UO) conditions required to guarantee global exponential convergence of the estimation error in the ambient space for both measurement cases. In the case of relative position measurements, UO requires only a persistence-of-excitation condition on the target acceleration, whereas for bearing measurements, additional conditions are required. Building on this, a nonlinear complementary filter on $\mathbf{SO}(3)$ is designed to provide a smooth estimate of the orientation component of the state with almost global asymptotic stability. Finally, simulation results are provided to validate the proposed solution.
10.5SYMay 11
Equivariant Observer Design on SL(3) for Image Intensity-Based Homography EstimationTarek Bouazza, Pieter van Goor, Robert Mahony et al.
This paper addresses the problem of homography estimation using a nonlinear observer designed on the Lie group $\mathbf{SL}(3)$ that exploits the full image information through direct image registration. Unlike traditional feature-based methods, which rely on extensive feature extraction and matching, the proposed approach formulates an observer that minimises a cost function defined directly in terms of image pixel intensities. Explicit conditions ensuring the non-degeneracy of the cost function are derived, and a comprehensive analysis is conducted to characterise and generate degenerate (unobservable) image configurations. Theoretical results demonstrate local exponential convergence of the observer. To improve local convergence properties, a second-order observer variant is introduced by incorporating the Hessian of the cost function into the correction term. Simulation results demonstrate the performance of the proposed solutions on real images.
CVAug 3, 2025
A Simple Algebraic Solution for Estimating the Pose of a Camera from Planar Point FeaturesTarek Bouazza, Tarek Hamel, Claude Samson
This paper presents a simple algebraic method to estimate the pose of a camera relative to a planar target from $n \geq 4$ reference points with known coordinates in the target frame and their corresponding bearing measurements in the camera frame. The proposed approach follows a hierarchical structure; first, the unit vector normal to the target plane is determined, followed by the camera's position vector, its distance to the target plane, and finally, the full orientation. To improve the method's robustness to measurement noise, an averaging methodology is introduced to refine the estimation of the target's normal direction. The accuracy and robustness of the approach are validated through extensive experiments.