Minimizing The Maximum Distance Traveled To Form Patterns With Systems of Mobile Robots

  • Jared Coleman
  • , Evangelos Kranakis
  • , Oscar Morales-Ponce
  • , Jaroslav Opatrny
  • , Jorge Urrutia
  • , Birgit Vogtenhuber

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

In the pattern formation problem, robots in a system must self-coordinate to form a given pattern, regardless of translation, rotation, uniform-scaling, and/or reflection. In other words, a valid final configuration of the system is a formation that is \textit{similar} to the desired pattern. While there has been no shortage of research in the pattern formation problem under a variety of assumptions, models, and contexts, we consider the additional constraint that the maximum distance traveled among all robots in the system is minimum. Existing work in pattern formation and closely related problems are typically application-specific or not concerned with optimality (but rather feasibility). We show the necessary conditions any optimal solution must satisfy and present a solution for systems of three robots. Our work also led to an interesting result that has applications beyond pattern formation. Namely, a metric for comparing two triangles where a distance of $0$ indicates the triangles are similar, and $1$ indicates they are \emph{fully dissimilar}.
Original languageEnglish
Pages73-79
Number of pages7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2020
Externally publishedYes
Event32nd Canadian Conference on Computational Geometry, CCCG 2020 - Saskatoon, Canada
Duration: Aug 5 2020Aug 7 2020

Conference

Conference32nd Canadian Conference on Computational Geometry, CCCG 2020
Country/TerritoryCanada
CitySaskatoon
Period8/5/208/7/20

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Geometry and Topology
  • Computational Mathematics

Keywords

  • cs.CG
  • cs.RO

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