Kinematic cartography for locomotion at low reynolds numbers

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Abstract

Kinematic motion planning often requires a notion of "distance" between configurations. Euclidean distances on a parameter space are easy to compute, but can drastically distort the effort required to change configuration. Here, we present a framework for characterizing this distortion, based on principles adopted from the cartographic community, and a method for transforming configuration coordinates to better represent actuation costs. As a demonstration of this approach, we derive a true configuration distance metric for an important class of locomoting systems: low Reynolds number swimmers. Applying our cartographic coordinate transformation to these systems both provides intuition for previous numerical results, and allows direct geometric comparison between systems with heterogeneous morphology.

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APA

Hatton, R. L., & Choset, H. (2012). Kinematic cartography for locomotion at low reynolds numbers. In Robotics: Science and Systems (Vol. 7, pp. 113–120). MIT Press Journals. https://doi.org/10.15607/rss.2011.vii.017

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