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Visual inspection of hydroelectric dams using an autonomous underwater vehicle

Pere Ridao, Marc Carreras, David Ribas, Rafael García

Year
2010
Citations
143

Abstract

Abstract This paper presents an automated solution to the visual inspection problem of hydroelectric dams. A small autonomous underwater vehicle, controllable in four degrees of freedom (surge, sway, heave, and yaw), is used for autonomously exploring the wall of a dam. The robot is easily programmed using a mission control language. Missions are executed by an intelligent control architecture that guides the robot to follow a predefined path surveying the wall. During the mission, the robot gathers onboard navigation data synchronized with optical imagery, sonar, and absolute navigation data, obtained from a moored buoy equipped with an ultra‐short baseline system. After the mission, the images of the wall are used to build a photomosaic of the inspected area. First, image features are matched over the image sequence. Then, navigation data and interimage correspondences are optimized together using bundle adjustment techniques. Thus, a georeferenced globally aligned set of images is obtained. Finally, a blending algorithm is used to obtain smooth seam transitions among the different images that constitute the mosaic, compensating for light artifacts and improving the visual perception of the scene. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords

Computer visionArtificial intelligenceRobotEngineeringUnderwaterComputer scienceRemotely operated underwater vehicleSet (abstract data type)Mobile robotGeography

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