GPRL: Gaussian Processes-Based Relative Localization for Multi-Robot Systems
Relative localization is crucial for multi-robot systems to perform cooperative tasks, especially in GPS-denied environments. Current techniques for multi-robot relative localization rely on expensive or short-range sensors such as cameras and LIDARs. As a result, these algorithms face challenges such as high computational complexity, dependencies on well-structured environments, etc. To overcome these limitations, we propose a new distributed approach to perform relative localization using a Gaussian Processes map of the Radio Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) values from a single wireless Access Point (AP) to which the robots are connected. Our approach, Gaussian Processes-based Relative Localization (GPRL), combines two pillars. First, the robots locate the AP w.r.t. their local reference frames using novel hierarchical inferencing that significantly reduces computational complexity. Secondly, the robots obtain relative positions of neighbor robots with an AP-oriented vector transformation. The approach readily applies to resource-constrained devices and relies only on the ubiquitously-available RSSI measurement. We extensively validate the performance of the two pillars of the proposed GRPL in Robotarium simulations. We also demonstrate the applicability of GPRL through a multi-robot rendezvous task with a team of three real-world robots. The results demonstrate that GPRL outperformed state-of-the-art approaches regarding accuracy, computation, and real-time performance.
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