Decentralized Control of Large Collaborative Swarms using Random Finite Set Theory

2021 
Controlling large swarms of robotic agents presents many challenges including, but not limited to, computational complexity due to a large number of agents, uncertainty in the functionality of each agent in the swarm, and uncertainty in the swarm's configuration. The contribution of this work is to decentralize Random Finite Set (RFS) control of large collaborative swarms for control of individual agents. The RFS control formulation assumes that the topology underlying the swarm control is complete and uses the complete graph in a centralized manner. To generalize the control topology in a localized or decentralized manner, sparse LQR is used to sparsify the RFS control gain matrix obtained using iterative LQR. This allows agents to use information of agents near each other (localized topology) or only the agent's own information (decentralized topology) to make a control decision. Sparsity and performance for decentralized RFS control are compared for different degrees of localization in feedback control gains which show that the stability and performance compared to centralized control do not degrade significantly in providing RFS control for large collaborative swarms.
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