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Robot localization using a computer vision sextant

Fábio Gagliardi Cozman, Eric Krotkov

Year
2002
Citations
61

Abstract

This paper explores the possibility of using Sun altitude for localization of a robot in totally unknown territory. A set of Sun altitudes is obtained by processing a sequence of time-indexed images of the sky. Each altitude constrains the viewer to a circle on the surface of a celestial body, called the circle of equal altitude. A set of circles of equal altitude can be intersected to yield viewer position. We use this principle to obtain the position on Earth. Since altitude measurements are corrupted by noise, a least-square estimate is numerically calculated from the sequence of altitudes. The paper discusses the necessary theory for Sun-based localization, the technical issues of camera calibration and image processing, and presents preliminary results with real data.

Keywords

Altitude (triangle)Computer visionPosition (finance)Artificial intelligenceComputer scienceCalibrationNoise (video)RobotSet (abstract data type)Sky

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