Common normal (robotics)
In robotics the common normal of two non-intersecting joint axes is a line perpendicular to both axes.[1]
The common normal can be used to characterize robot arm links, by using the "common normal distance" and the angle between the link axes in a plane perpendicular to the common normal.[2] When two consecutive joint axes are parallel, the common normal is not unique and an arbitrary common normal may be used, usually one that passes through the center of a coordinate system.[3]
The common normal is widely used in the representation of the frames of reference for robot joints and links, and the selection of minimal representations with the Denavit–Hartenberg parameters.
References
- Introduction to Robotics by Saeed Niku ISBN 0-470-60446-8 page 75
- Robot manipulators: mathematics, programming, and control by Richard P. Paul 1981 ISBN 0-262-16082-X page 51
- Foundations of Robotics: Analysis and Control by Tsuneo Yoshikawa 1990 ISBN 0-262-24028-9 page 33
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