KOREASCHOLAR

Faster-than-real-time Hybrid Automotive Underwater Glider Simulation for Ocean Mapping

Woen-Sug Choi, Brian Bingham, Richard Camilli
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/415305
해양환경안전학회지
Vol.28 No.3 (2022.05)
pp.441-450
해양환경안전학회 (The Korean Society Of Marine Environment & Safety)
Abstract

The introduction of autonomous underwater gliders (AUGs) specifically addresses the reduction of operational costs that were previously prohibited with conventional autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) using a "scaling-down" design philosophy by utilizing the characteristics of autonomous drifters to far extend operation duration and coverage. Long-duration, wide-area missions raise the cost and complexity of in-water testing for novel approaches to autonomous mission planning. As a result, a simulator that supports the rapid design, development, and testing of autonomy solutions across a wide range using software-in-the-loop simulation at faster-than-real-time speeds becomes critical. This paper describes a faster-than-real-time AUG simulator that can support high-resolution bathymetry for a wide variety of ocean environments, including ocean currents, various sensors, and vehicle dynamics. On top of the de facto standard ROS-Gazebo framework and open-sourced underwater vehicle simulation packages, features specific to AUGs for ocean mapping are developed. For vehicle dynamics, the next-generation hybrid autonomous underwater gliders (Hybrid-AUGs) operate with both the buoyancy engine and the thrusters to improve navigation for bathymetry mappings, e.g., line trajectory, are is implemented since because it can also describe conventional AUGs without the thrusters. The simulation results are validated with experiments while operating at 120 times faster than the real-time.

Table Content
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Background and Objectives
3. Glider Dynamics
    3.1 Equations of motion for hybrid glider
    3.2 Validation and Verification
4. Underwater Environments
    4.1 Ocean currents
    4.2 Dynamic bathymetry
5. Mission simulation
    5.1 Interfaces
    5.2 Results
6. Conclusion
Acknowledgment
References
Author
  • Richard Camilli(Associate Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Falmouth, MA 02543, United States)
  • Brian Bingham(Professor, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943, United States)
  • Woen-Sug Choi(Postdoctoral Researcher, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943, United States) Corresponding author