SPMASYSYJan 3, 2018

Autonomous Tracking of Intermittent RF Source Using a UAV Swarm

arXiv:1801.024780.2864 citationsh-index: 32
AI Analysis15

For UAV swarm operators needing to track intermittent RF sources, this work provides a comparative analysis of algorithms, though the results are incremental.

The paper addresses autonomous localization and tracking of an intermittent RF source using a UAV swarm. The steepest descent path planning outperforms bio-inspired path planning by an order of magnitude, and recursive Bayesian estimator narrowly outperforms detection-based EKF.

Localization of a radio frequency (RF) transmitter with intermittent transmissions is considered via a group of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) equipped with omnidirectional received signal strength (RSS) sensors. This group embarks on an autonomous patrol to localize and track the target with a specified accuracy, as quickly as possible. The challenge can be decomposed into two stages: 1) estimation of the target position given previous measurements (localization), and 2) planning the future trajectory of the tracking UAVs to get lower expected localization error given current estimation (path planning). For each stage we compare two algorithms in terms of performance and computational load. For the localization stage, we compare a detection based extended Kalman filter (EKF) and a recursive Bayesian estimator. For the path planning stage, we compare steepest descent posterior Cramer-Rao lower bound (CRLB) path planning and a bio-inspired heuristic path planning. Our results show that the steepest descent path planning outperforms the bio-inspired path planning by an order of magnitude, and recursive Bayesian estimator narrowly outperforms detection based EKF.

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