On the Power of Manifold Samples in Exploring Configuration Spaces and the Dimensionality of Narrow Passages
This work addresses motion planning challenges for robotics, particularly in high-dimensional narrow passages, with incremental improvements to existing methods.
The paper tackles motion planning for robots in complex environments by extending the Manifold Samples (MMS) framework, which uses low-dimensional manifold samples to better capture connectivity than point samples, resulting in over 20-fold speedup compared to PRM in coordination-tight settings. It also provides a probabilistic completeness proof and introduces a novel characterization of narrow passages based on dimensionality.
We extend our study of Motion Planning via Manifold Samples (MMS), a general algorithmic framework that combines geometric methods for the exact and complete analysis of low-dimensional configuration spaces with sampling-based approaches that are appropriate for higher dimensions. The framework explores the configuration space by taking samples that are entire low-dimensional manifolds of the configuration space capturing its connectivity much better than isolated point samples. The contributions of this paper are as follows: (i) We present a recursive application of MMS in a six-dimensional configuration space, enabling the coordination of two polygonal robots translating and rotating amidst polygonal obstacles. In the adduced experiments for the more demanding test cases MMS clearly outperforms PRM, with over 20-fold speedup in a coordination-tight setting. (ii) A probabilistic completeness proof for the most prevalent case, namely MMS with samples that are affine subspaces. (iii) A closer examination of the test cases reveals that MMS has, in comparison to standard sampling-based algorithms, a significant advantage in scenarios containing high-dimensional narrow passages. This provokes a novel characterization of narrow passages which attempts to capture their dimensionality, an attribute that had been (to a large extent) unattended in previous definitions.