Passive Dynamics in the Control of Gymnastic Maneuvers
Item
-
Title
-
en_US
Passive Dynamics in the Control of Gymnastic Maneuvers
-
Creator
-
en_US
Playter, Robert
-
Date
-
2004-10-20T20:27:42Z
-
Date Available
-
2004-10-20T20:27:42Z
-
Date Issued
-
en_US
1995-03-01
-
Identifier
-
en_US
AITR-1504
-
Abstract
-
en_US
The control of aerial gymnastic maneuvers is challenging because these maneuvers frequently involve complex rotational motion and because the performer has limited control of the maneuver during flight. A performer can influence a maneuver using a sequence of limb movements during flight. However, the same sequence may not produce reliable performances in the presence of off-nominal conditions. How do people compensate for variations in performance to reliably produce aerial maneuvers? In this report I explore the role that passive dynamic stability may play in making the performance of aerial maneuvers simple and reliable. I present a control strategy comprised of active and passive components for performing robot front somersaults in the laboratory. I show that passive dynamics can neutrally stabilize the layout somersault which involves an "inherently unstable" rotation about the intermediate principal axis. And I show that a strategy that uses open loop joint torques plus passive dynamics leads to more reliable 1 1/2 twisting front somersaults in simulation than a strategy that uses prescribed limb motion. Results are presented from laboratory experiments on gymnastic robots, from dynamic simulation of humans and robots, and from linear stability analyses of these systems.
-
Extent
-
30256720 bytes
-
4664705 bytes
-
Format
-
application/postscript
-
application/pdf
-
Language
-
en_US
-
Relation
-
en_US
AITR-1504