Spherical robot

A Spherical Robot, also known as spherical mobile robot, or ball-shaped robot is a mobile robot with spherical external shape .[1] A spherical robot is typically made of a spherical shell serving as the body of the robot and an internal driving unit (IDU) that enables the robot to move .[2] Spherical mobile robots typically move by rolling over surfaces. The rolling motion is commonly performed by changing the robot's center of mass (i.e., pendulum-driven system), but there exist some other driving mechanisms [3] .[4] In a wider sense, however, the term "spherical robot" may also be referred to a stationary robot with two rotary joints and one prismatic joint which forms a spherical coordinate system (e.g., Stanford arm [5] ).

A pendulum-driven spherical mobile robot. (The white arrow is used to determine the position and orientation of the robot via a vision-based algorithm.)

The spherical shell is usually made of solid transparent material but it can also be made of opaque or flexible material for special applications or because of special drive mechanisms .[6] The spherical shell can fully seal the robot from the outside environment. There exist reconfigurable spherical robots that can transform the spherical shell into other structures and perform other tasks aside from rolling.[7]

Spherical robots can operate as autonomous robots, or as remotely controlled (teleoperated) robots .[8] In almost all the spherical robots, communication between the internal driving unit and the external control unit (data logging or navigation system) is wireless because of the mobility and closed nature of the spherical shell. The power source of these robots is mostly a battery located inside the robot but there exist some spherical robots that utilize solar cells.[8] Spherical mobile robots can be categorized either by their application or by their drive mechanism.

Applications

Spherical mobile robots have applications [8] in surveillance, environmental monitoring, patrol, underwater and planetary exploration, rehabilitation, child-development,[9] and entertainment. Spherical robots can be used as amphibious robots [7] viable on land as well as on (or under) water.[10]

Locomotion

The most common drive mechanisms of the spherical robots operate by changing the robot's center of mass.[1] Other driving mechanisms [8] make use of: (1) conservation of angular velocity by flywheels,[3] (2) environment's wind, (3) distorting the spherical shell, and (4) gyroscopic effect.

Current research

The research on spherical robots involves studies on design and prototyping ,[11] dynamical modelling and simulation,[3] control,[12] motion planning,[2][4] and navigation.[13] From a theoretical point of view, the rolling motion of a spherical robot on a surface represents a nonholonomic system which has been particularly studied in the scope of control and motion planning.[2]

Commercial spherical robots

Commercial spherical robots are available for sale to the public. Some current commercial products are GroundBot, Roball, and QueBall, as well as Sphero's BB-8, based on the droid character of the same name introduced in the 2015 film Star Wars: The Force Awakens.[14] Samsung Ballie is a Spherical Rolling tennis Ball look alike personal robot which was introduced in samsung CES2020[15] Sajid Sadi VP of the research team at Samsung is quoted saying that "Ballie’s ability to move around enables it to respond to a person wherever they are. Parents could ask Ballie to check up on kids to make sure they’ve completed their homework, for instance, or monitor the types of television shows and movies they’re watching."[16]

gollark: Probably.
gollark: I mean, with a male, is the decision for it to be purple/green biome-based?
gollark: I know that part.
gollark: Is nebula blue/purple or green/redness determined by biome? None of my CB desert nebulae are turning out red/green.
gollark: According to my poll on the forums, chronos are the most popular xenowyrm by a wide margin, nobody likes the darker red coppers (but the green ones are slightly more popular than the rainbow ones) and all zyumorphs are pretty generally liked.

See also

References

  1. Halme, A.; Schonberg, T.; Yan Wang (1996). "Motion control of a spherical mobile robot". Proceedings of 4th IEEE International Workshop on Advanced Motion Control - AMC '96 - MIE. 1. pp. 259–264. doi:10.1109/AMC.1996.509415. ISBN 0-7803-3219-9.
  2. Mukherjee, Ranjan; Minor, Mark A.; Pukrushpan, Jay T. (2002). "Motion Planning for a Spherical Mobile Robot: Revisiting the Classical Ball-Plate Problem". Journal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control. 124 (4): 502–511. doi:10.1115/1.1513177.
  3. Joshi, Vrunda A.; Banavar, Ravi N.; Hippalgaonkar, Rohit (2010). "Design and analysis of a spherical mobile robot". Mechanism and Machine Theory. 45 (2): 130–136. doi:10.1016/j.mechmachtheory.2009.04.003.
  4. Alizadeh, Hossein Vahid; Mahjoob, Mohammad J. (2009). "Effect of Incremental Driving Motion on a Vision-Based Path Planning of a Spherical Robot". 2009 Second International Conference on Computer and Electrical Engineering. pp. 299–303. doi:10.1109/ICCEE.2009.133. ISBN 978-1-4244-5365-8.
  5. "The Stanford arm".
  6. Ylikorpi, Tomi J; Halme, Aarne J; Forsman, Pekka J (2017). "Dynamic modeling and obstacle-crossing capability of flexible pendulum-driven ball-shaped robots". Robotics and Autonomous Systems. Elsevier. 87: 269–280. doi:10.1016/j.robot.2016.10.019.
  7. Shi, Liwei; Guo, Shuxiang; Mao, Shilian; Yue, Chunfeng; Li, Maoxun; Asaka, Kinji (2013). "Development of an amphibious turtle-inspired spherical mother robot". Journal of Bionic Engineering. Elsevier. 10 (4): 446–455. doi:10.1016/S1672-6529(13)60248-6.
  8. "Spherical Mobile Robots: Research, Design, Application".
  9. Michaud, F.; Laplante, J.-F.; Larouche, H.; Duquette, A.; Caron, S.; Letourneau, D.; Masson, P. (2005). "Autonomous Spherical Mobile Robot for Child-Development Studies". IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics - Part A: Systems and Humans. 35 (4): 471–480. doi:10.1109/TSMCA.2005.850596.
  10. Vahid Alizadeh, H.; Mahjoob, M. J. (2011). "Quadratic damping model for a spherical mobile robot moving on the free surface of the water". 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Robotic and Sensors Environments (ROSE). pp. 125–130. doi:10.1109/ROSE.2011.6058541. ISBN 978-1-4577-0819-0.
  11. Guo, Shuxiang; Mao, Shilian; Shi, Liwei; Li, Maoxun (2012). "Design and kinematic analysis of an amphibious spherical robot". 2012 IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics and Automation. pp. 2214–2219. doi:10.1109/ICMA.2012.6285687. ISBN 978-1-4673-1278-3.
  12. Kamaldar, M.; Mahjoob, M. J.; Haeri Yazdi, M.; Vahid-Alizadeh, H.; Ahmadizadeh, S. (2011). "A control synthesis for reducing lateral oscillations of a spherical robot". 2011 IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics. pp. 546–551. doi:10.1109/ICMECH.2011.5971346. ISBN 978-1-61284-982-9.
  13. Hou, Kang; Sun, Hanxu; Jia, Qingxuan; Zhang, Yanheng (2012). "An autonomous positioning and navigation system for spherical mobile robot". Procedia Engineering. Elsevier. 29: 2556–2561. doi:10.1016/j.proeng.2012.01.350.
  14. Hackett, Robert (May 26, 2015). "Disney just developed the most adorable walking robot". Fortune. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  15. url=https://www.samsung.com/levant/explore/experience/ces2020/ https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=c7N5UDZX7TQ&feature=youtu.be https://www.digitaltrends.com/home/ballie-is-a-rolling-robot-from-samsung-that-can-help-around-the-home
  16. https://venturebeat.com/2020/01/25/samsungs-vp-of-research-on-making-ballie-mobile-personable-and-nonthreatening/
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