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Balancing and Vision G

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Title: Balancing and Vision G


1
Balancing and VisionGábor StépánDepartment of
Applied MechanicsBudapest University of
Technology and Economics
2
Contents
  • Introduction 1 2 (sports local nonlinearity)
  • Robotic balancing (sampling and round-off)
  • Micro-chaos (stable unstable impressionists)
  • Human balancing
  • Critical delay and threshold
  • The labyrinth
  • Vision a mechanical view
  • Conclusions

3
Chaos is amusing
  • Unpredictable games strong nonlinearitiesthrow
    dice, play cards/chess, computer games ball
    games (football, soccer, basketball impact)plus
    nonlinear rules (tennis 6/4,0/6,6/4,
    snooker)balancing (skiing, skating, kayak,
    surfing,)
  • Ice-hockey (one of the most unpredictable
    games)- impacts between club/puck/wall- impacts
    between players/wall - self-balancing of players
    on ice (non-holonomic)- continuous and fast
    exchanging of players

4
Small-scale nonlinearities
  • Engineering in small-scale,
    everything is linear
  • not everything is linear in
    small-scale
  • everything is non-linear in
    small-scale?
  • For example, digital effects- quantization in
    time sampling linear - quantization in space
    round-off errors at ADA converters
    non-linear

5
Position control
  • 1 DoF models ? x
  • Blue trajectoriesQ 0
  • Pink trajectories Q Px Dx

6
Force control
  • Desired contact forceFd kyd
  • Sensed force Fs ky
  • Control force Q P(Fd Fs) DFs Fs or d

7
Stabilization (balancing)
  • Control forceQ Px Dx
  • Special case of force control with k lt 0

8
Alices Adventures in Wonderland
  • Lewis Carroll (1899)

9
Balancing inverted pendulum
  • Higdon, Cannon (1962) 10-20 papers / year
  • n 2 DoF ? ?, x x cyclic coordinate
  • linearization at ?
    0

10
Digital balancing
  • 1) Q 0 - no control
  • ? ? 0 is unstable
  • 2) Q(t) P?(t) D?(t) (PD control)
  • ? 0 is exponentially stable ? D gt 0, P gt
    mg
  • 3) Q(t) P? (tj ?) D? (tj ?) (with
    sampling ? )

11
Sampling delay of digital control
delay
ZOH
12
Digitally controlled pendulum
  • ,

  • ,

13
Stability of digital control sampling

  • Hopf

  • pitchfork

14
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15

16
ABB
  • Sampling frequency of industrial robots 30 Hz
    for the years 1990 2005 above 100 Hz recently
  • Force control (EU 6FP RehaRob project),and
    balancing (stabilization-)tasks

Balancing
RehaRob
17
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18
Vertical direction?
19
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20

21

22

23
Random oscillations of robotic balancing

  • sampling time
    and
  • quantization (round-off)

24
Stability of digital control round-off
  • h one digit converted to control force
  • det(?I
    B) 0 ?
  • ?1 e?
    gt1, ?2 e?, ?3 0

25
1D cartoon the micro-chaos map
  • Drop 2 dimensions, rescale x with h ? a ? e?,

    b ? P
  • A pure math approach ( p gt 0 , p lt q )
  • solution with xj y(j) leads to ?-chaos map,
  • a ep, b q(ep 1)/p ? a gt 1, (0 lt) a b
    lt 1
  • small scale xj1 a xj , large scale xj1 (a
    b) xj

26
Digital stabilization of stick-slip
  • normal form
  • digital effects round-off
    sampling

27
Stick-slip discrete map
  • Solution for one sampling interval
  • By we obtain the micro-chaos
    map

28
Micro-chaos map
  • large scale
  • small scale
  • Typical in digitallycontrolled machines

29
Butterfly effect
  • Prop. 1 The map has sensitive dependence on
    initial conditions
  • Horseshoe (Smale) invariant Cantor set on
    which the map is topologically conjugate to a
    Bernoulli shift on 2 symbols.

30
Attractive set
  • Prop. 2 A is a positivelyinvariantattractive
    set

31
Symbolic dynamics
Transition matrix A
All elements ofAK-1 are non-zero
32
Characterization of ?-chaos (a5/2, b2)
  • Fractal dim.

33
2D micro-chaos map
  • ZOH delay, and round-off for 1st order process

  • (p gt 0, p lt q)
  • Solution and Poincare lead to

  • (a gt1, a b lt 1)
  • Linearization at fixed points leads to
    eigenvalues
  • So in 1 step the solution settles at an attractor
    that has a graph similar to the 1D micro-chaos map

34
Csernak,Stepan (subm. 07)
35
3D micro-chaos

Enikov,Stepan (J Vib Cont, 98)
36
Transient micro-chaos
  • PID control of machines in the presence of
    Coulomb friction
  • Switch of robots from position control to force
    control, transient impacts with an elastic
    environment
  • Stabilization of an unstable equilibrium or an
    unstable periodic motion of a machine (e.g.
    balancing, control of chaos, )

37
Stability problems of polishing tools
38
Transient micro-chaos map
  • a1.5
  • b1.2
  • S2/15
  • I00.1

39
Trivial micro-chaos map
40
Kick-out number
  • Fibonacci series fn fn-1 fn-2 f5 3
  • Length of intervals 1/2n 2

  • 1

  • 1

  • 0

Csernak,Stepan (J Nonl Sci 05)
41
Non-trivial transient micro-chaos
  • a1.4
  • b1.2
  • I00.2

42
Non-trivial mean kick-out numbers
  • M
  • a1.4
  • b1.2
  • I0gt

43
Robotic balancing
  • Even if vibration problems are all settled, there
    are still serious drawbacks
  • Balancing is possible on any inclination, without
    knowing the exact vertical direction
  • Balancing works in space (and not in plane only)
  • Balancing should incorporate gyroscopic effects
  • Study human balancing in more details!elderly
    people, sportsmen
    delay, threshold, stochasticity

44
Human balancing
  • Analogous or digital?Winking, eye-motion
    self-samplingplus neurons firing still, not
    digital
  • 1) Q(t) P?(t) D?(t) (PD control)
  • ? 0 is exponentially stable ? D gt 0, P gt
    mg
  • 2) Q(t) P?(t ?) D?(t ?) (with reflex
    delay ? )

45
Stability chart critical delay

  • ? instability

46
Stability chart critical reflex delay

  • ? instability

47
Experimental observations
  • Kawazoe (1992)untrained manual control
  • (Dagger, sweep, pub)
  • Self-balancingBetzke (1994)target shooting0.3
    0.7 Hz

48
Stability is the art of keeping the balance
49
Labyrinth human balancing organ
Dynamic receptor
Static receptor
Both angle and angular velocity signals are
needed!
50
Artificial labyrinth

  • Stepan, Kollar (Math Comp Model, 2000)

51
Vision and balancing
  • Vision can help balancing even when labyrinth
    does not function properly (e.g., dry ear
    effect)
  • The visual system also provides the necessary
    angle and angular velocity signals!
  • But the vertical direction is needed (buildings,
    trees), otherwise it fails
  • Delay in vision and thinking (Ilona Kovacs)

52
brain
  • Colliculus superior

t gt 0.6 s
Medial Temporal Loop
MTL
t 0.1s
arm
eyes
53
Human balancing is also chaotic
  • We could reduce the delay below critical value
    through the MTL (Medial Temporal Loop)
  • But we cannot reduce much the thresholds of our
    sensory system (glasses...)
  • Both delay and threshold increases with age see
    increasing number of fall-overs in elderly homes
  • Reduce gains, add stochastic perturbation to
    signal to decrease threshold at a 3rd sensory
    system our feet (Moss,Milton, Nature, 2003)

54
Balancing the self-balanced
  • Warning only a father has the right to do this

kid
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