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Motion Planning with Six Degrees of Freedom

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dc.creator Donald, Bruce R.
dc.date 2004-10-20T20:09:58Z
dc.date 2004-10-20T20:09:58Z
dc.date 1984-05-01
dc.date.accessioned 2013-10-09T02:47:44Z
dc.date.available 2013-10-09T02:47:44Z
dc.date.issued 2013-10-09
dc.identifier AITR-791
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6944
dc.identifier.uri http://koha.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/1721
dc.description The motion planning problem is of central importance to the fields of robotics, spatial planning, and automated design. In robotics we are interested in the automatic synthesis of robot motions, given high-level specifications of tasks and geometric models of the robot and obstacles. The Mover's problem is to find a continuous, collision-free path for a moving object through an environment containing obstacles. We present an implemented algorithm for the classical formulation of the three-dimensional Mover's problem: given an arbitrary rigid polyhedral moving object P with three translational and three rotational degrees of freedom, find a continuous, collision-free path taking P from some initial configuration to a desired goal configuration. This thesis describes the first known implementation of a complete algorithm (at a given resolution) for the full six degree of freedom Movers' problem. The algorithm transforms the six degree of freedom planning problem into a point navigation problem in a six-dimensional configuration space (called C-Space). The C-Space obstacles, which characterize the physically unachievable configurations, are directly represented by six-dimensional manifolds whose boundaries are five dimensional C-surfaces. By characterizing these surfaces and their intersections, collision-free paths may be found by the closure of three operators which (i) slide along 5-dimensional intersections of level C-Space obstacles; (ii) slide along 1- to 4-dimensional intersections of level C-surfaces; and (iii) jump between 6 dimensional obstacles. Implementing the point navigation operators requires solving fundamental representational and algorithmic questions: we will derive new structural properties of the C-Space constraints and shoe how to construct and represent C-Surfaces and their intersection manifolds. A definition and new theoretical results are presented for a six-dimensional C-Space extension of the generalized Voronoi diagram, called the C-Voronoi diagram, whose structure we relate to the C-surface intersection manifolds. The representations and algorithms we develop impact many geometric planning problems, and extend to Cartesian manipulators with six degrees of freedom.
dc.format 25460704 bytes
dc.format 9664942 bytes
dc.format application/postscript
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en_US
dc.relation AITR-791
dc.title Motion Planning with Six Degrees of Freedom


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