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Distributed Manipulation (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2000)
Loot Price: R2,920
Discovery Miles 29 200
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Distributed Manipulation (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2000)
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Distributed manipulation effects motion on objects through a large
number of points of contact. The primary benefit of distributed
manipulators is that many small inexpensive mechanisms can move and
transport large heavy objects. In fact, each individual component
is simple, but their combined effect is quite powerful.
Furthermore, distributed manipulators are fault-tolerant because if
one component breaks, the other components can compensate for the
failure and the whole system can still perform its task. Finally,
distributed manipulators can perform a variety of tasks in
parallel. Distributed manipulation can be performed by many types
of mechanisms at different scales. Due to the recent advances of
MEMS (micro-electro-mechanical system) technology, it has become
feasible to quickly manufacture distributed micro-manipulators at
low cost. One such system is an actuator array where hundreds of
micro-scaled actuators transport and manipulate small objects that
rest on them. Macroscopic versions of the actuator array have also
been developed and analyzed. Another form of distributed
manipulation is derived from a vibrating plate, and teams of mobile
robots have been used to herd large objects into desired locations.
There are many fundamental issues involved in distributed
manipulation. Since a distributed manipulator has many actuators,
distributed control strategies must be considered to effectively
manipulate objects. A basic understanding of contact analysis
between the actuators and object must also be considered. When each
actuator in the array has a sensor, distributed sensing presents
some basic research challenges. Distributed computation and
communication are key issues to enable the successful deployment of
distributed manipulators into use. Finally, the trade-off in
centralized and de-centralized approaches in all of these
algorithms must be investigated.
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