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Autonomous Automobile Trajectory Tracking for Off-Road Driving: Controller Design, Experimental Validation and Racing
Hoffmann, G.M.
Tomlin, C.J.
Montemerlo, M.
Thrun, S.
Stanford Univ., Stanford;
This paper appears in: American Control Conference, 2007. ACC '07
Publication Date: 9-13 July 2007
On page(s): 2296-2301
Location: New York, NY,
ISSN: 0743-1619
ISBN: 1-4244-0988-8
INSPEC Accession Number: 9886792
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/ACC.2007.4282788
Current Version Published: 2007-07-30
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This paper presents a nonlinear control law for an automobile to autonomously track a trajectory, provided in real-time, on rapidly varying, off-road terrain. Existing methods can suffer from a lack of global stability, a lack of tracking accuracy, or a dependence on smooth road surfaces, any one of which could lead to the loss of the vehicle in autonomous off-road driving. This work treats automobile trajectory tracking in a new manner, by considering the orientation of the front wheels - not the vehicle's body - with respect to the desired trajectory, enabling collocated control of the system. A steering control law is designed using the kinematic equations of motion, for which global asymptotic stability is proven. This control law is then augmented to handle the dynamics of pneumatic tires and of the servo-actuated steering wheel. To control vehicle speed, the brake and throttle are actuated by a switching proportional integral (PI) controller. The complete control system consumes a negligible fraction of a computer's resources. It was implemented on a Volkswagen Touareg, "Stanley", the Stanford Racing Team's entry in the DARPA Grand Challenge 2005, a 132 mi autonomous off-road race. Experimental results from Stanley demonstrate the ability of the controller to track trajectories between obstacles, over steep and wavy terrain, through deep mud puddles, and along cliff edges, with a typical root mean square (RMS) crosstrack error of under 0.1 m. In the DARPA National Qualification Event 2005, Stanley was the only vehicle out of 40 competitors to not hit an obstacle or miss a gate, and in the DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Stanley had the fastest course completion time.
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