Paper ID: 2305.08957
Exploration of unknown indoor regions by a swarm of energy-constrained drones
Ori Rappel, Joseph Z. Ben-Asher, Alfred M. Bruckstein
Several distributed algorithms are presented for the exploration of unknown indoor regions by a swarm of flying, energy constrained agents. The agents, which are identical, autonomous, anonymous and oblivious, uniformly cover the region and thus explore it using predefined action rules based on locally sensed information and the energy level of the agents. While flying drones have many advantages in search and rescue scenarios, their main drawback is a high power consumption during flight combined with limited, on-board energy. Furthermore, in these scenarios agent size is severely limited and consequently so are the total weight and capabilities of the agents. The region is modeled as a connected sub-set of a regular grid composed of square cells that the agents enter, over time, via entry points. Some of the agents may settle in unoccupied cells as the exploration progresses. Settled agents conserve energy and become virtual pheromones for the exploration and coverage process, beacons that subsequently aid the remaining, and still exploring, mobile agents. The termination of the coverage process is based on a backward propagating information diffusion scheme. Various algorithmical alternatives are discussed and upper bounds derived and compared to experimental results. Finally, an optimal entry rate that minimizes the total energy consumption is derived for the case of a linear regions.
Submitted: May 15, 2023