Pincer-based vs. Same-direction Search Strategies After Smart Evaders by Swarms of Agents

04/14/2021
by   Roee M. Francos, et al.
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Suppose in a given planar region, there are smart mobile evaders and we want to detect them using sweeping agents. We assume that the agents have line sensors of equal length. We propose procedures for designing cooperative sweeping processes that ensure successful completion of the task, thereby deriving conditions on the sweeping velocity of the agents and their paths. Successful completion of the task means that evaders with a known limit on their velocity cannot escape the sweeping agents. A simpler task for the sweeping swarm is the confinement of the evaders to their initial domain. The feasibility of completing these tasks depends on geometric and dynamic constraints that impose a lower bound on the velocity the sweeping agent must have. This critical velocity is derived to ensure the satisfaction of the confinement task. Increasing the velocity above the lower bound enables the agents to complete the search task as well. We present a quantitative and qualitative comparison analysis between the total search time of same-direction sweep processes and pincer-movement search strategies. We evaluate the different strategies by using two metrics, total search time and the minimal critical velocity required for a successful search. We compare two types of pincer-movement search processes, circular and spiral, with their same-direction counterparts, for any even number of sweeping agents. We prove that pincer based strategies provide superior results for all practical scenarios and that the spiral pincer sweep process allows detection of all evaders while sweeping at nearly theoretically optimal velocities.

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