ROAILGJul 9, 2024

Intercepting Unauthorized Aerial Robots in Controlled Airspace Using Reinforcement Learning

arXiv:2407.06909v11 citationsh-index: 20
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses security and safety risks from UAVs in airspace, but is incremental as it applies existing RL methods to a specific domain.

This work tackled the problem of intercepting unauthorized UAVs in controlled airspace using reinforcement learning, resulting in a novel approach that trains fixed-wing UAV pursuer agents with algorithms like DreamerV3, TQC, and SAC, achieving robust performance in diverse scenarios.

The proliferation of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in controlled airspace presents significant risks, including potential collisions, disruptions to air traffic, and security threats. Ensuring the safe and efficient operation of airspace, particularly in urban environments and near critical infrastructure, necessitates effective methods to intercept unauthorized or non-cooperative UAVs. This work addresses the critical need for robust, adaptive systems capable of managing such threats through the use of Reinforcement Learning (RL). We present a novel approach utilizing RL to train fixed-wing UAV pursuer agents for intercepting dynamic evader targets. Our methodology explores both model-based and model-free RL algorithms, specifically DreamerV3, Truncated Quantile Critics (TQC), and Soft Actor-Critic (SAC). The training and evaluation of these algorithms were conducted under diverse scenarios, including unseen evasion strategies and environmental perturbations. Our approach leverages high-fidelity flight dynamics simulations to create realistic training environments. This research underscores the importance of developing intelligent, adaptive control systems for UAV interception, significantly contributing to the advancement of secure and efficient airspace management. It demonstrates the potential of RL to train systems capable of autonomously achieving these critical tasks.

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