Funnel Libraries for Real-Time Robust Feedback Motion Planning
This addresses the challenge of provably safe and robust control for robots with nonlinear dynamics in uncertain, cluttered environments, representing a significant advance rather than an incremental improvement.
The paper tackles the problem of generating real-time motion plans for robots that are guaranteed to succeed despite uncertainty, using pre-computed funnels and feedback controllers to ensure safety. It demonstrates the method with hardware experiments on a fixed-wing airplane avoiding obstacles at high speed (~12 mph) and simulations for ground vehicles and quadrotors.
We consider the problem of generating motion plans for a robot that are guaranteed to succeed despite uncertainty in the environment, parametric model uncertainty, and disturbances. Furthermore, we consider scenarios where these plans must be generated in real-time, because constraints such as obstacles in the environment may not be known until they are perceived (with a noisy sensor) at runtime. Our approach is to pre-compute a library of "funnels" along different maneuvers of the system that the state is guaranteed to remain within (despite bounded disturbances) when the feedback controller corresponding to the maneuver is executed. We leverage powerful computational machinery from convex optimization (sums-of-squares programming in particular) to compute these funnels. The resulting funnel library is then used to sequentially compose motion plans at runtime while ensuring the safety of the robot. A major advantage of the work presented here is that by explicitly taking into account the effect of uncertainty, the robot can evaluate motion plans based on how vulnerable they are to disturbances. We demonstrate and validate our method using extensive hardware experiments on a small fixed-wing airplane avoiding obstacles at high speed (~12 mph), along with thorough simulation experiments of ground vehicle and quadrotor models navigating through cluttered environments. To our knowledge, these demonstrations constitute one of the first examples of provably safe and robust control for robotic systems with complex nonlinear dynamics that need to plan in real-time in environments with complex geometric constraints.