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Dive into the research topics where Per-Magnus Olsson is active.

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Featured researches published by Per-Magnus Olsson.


robotics science and systems | 2009

Positioning Unmanned Aerial Vehicles As Communication Relays for Surveillance Tasks

Oleg Burdakov; Patrick Doherty; Kaj Holmberg; Jonas Kvarnström; Per-Magnus Olsson

When unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are used to survey distant targets, it is important to transmit sensor information back to a base station. As this communication often requires high uninterrupted bandwidth, the surveying UAV often needs afree line-of-sight to the base station, which can be problematic in urban or mountainous areas. Communication ranges may also belimited, especially for smaller UAVs. Though both problems can be solved through the use of relay chains consisting of one or more intermediate relay UAVs, this leads to a new problem: Where should relays be placed for optimum performance? We present two new algorithms capable of generating such relay chains, one being a dual ascent algorithm and the other a modification of the Bellman-Ford algorithm. As the priorities between the numberof hops in the relay chain and the cost of the chain may vary, wecalculate chains of different lengths and costs and let the ground operator choose between them. Several different formulations for edge costs are presented. In our test cases, both algorithms are substantially faster than an optimized version of the original Bellman-Ford algorithm, which is used for comparison.


The International Journal of Robotics Research | 2010

Relay Positioning for Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Surveillance

Oleg Burdakov; Patrick Doherty; Kaj Holmberg; Jonas Kvarnström; Per-Magnus Olsson

When unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are used for surveillance, information must often be transmitted to a base station in real time. However, limited communication ranges and the common requirement of free line of sight may make direct transmissions from distant targets impossible. This problem can be solved using relay chains consisting of one or more intermediate relay UAVs. This leads to the problem of positioning such relays given known obstacles, while taking into account a possibly mission-specific quality measure. The maximum quality of a chain may depend strongly on the number of UAVs allocated. Therefore, it is desirable to either generate a chain of maximum quality given the available UAVs or allow a choice from a spectrum of Pareto-optimal chains corresponding to different trade-offs between the number of UAVs used and the resulting quality. In this article, we define several problem variations in a continuous three-dimensional setting. We show how sets of Pareto-optimal chains can be generated using graph search and present a new label-correcting algorithm generating such chains significantly more efficiently than the best-known algorithms in the literature. Finally, we present a new dual ascent algorithm with better performance for certain tasks and situations.


international conference on control, automation, robotics and vision | 2010

Generating UAV communication networks for monitoring and surveillance

Per-Magnus Olsson; Jonas Kvarnström; Patrick Doherty; Oleg Burdakov; Kaj Holmberg

An important use of unmanned aerial vehicles is surveillance of distant targets, where sensor information must quickly be transmitted back to a base station. In many cases, high uninterrupted bandwidth requires line-of-sight between sender and transmitter to minimize quality degradation. Communication range is typically limited, especially when smaller UAVs are used. Both problems can be solved by creating relay chains for surveillance of a single target, and relay trees for simultaneous surveillance of multiple targets. In this paper, we show how such chains and trees can be calculated. For relay chains we create a set of chains offering different trade-offs between the number of UAVs in the chain and the chains cost. We also show new results on how relay trees can be quickly calculated and then incrementally improved if necessary. Encouraging empirical results for improvement of relay trees are presented.


Journal of Global Optimization | 2010

Optimal placement of UV-based communications relay nodes

Oleg Burdakov; Patrick Doherty; Kaj Holmberg; Per-Magnus Olsson

We consider a constrained optimization problem with mixed integer and real variables. It models optimal placement of communications relay nodes in the presence of obstacles. This problem is widely encountered, for instance, in robotics, where it is required to survey some target located in one point and convey the gathered information back to a base station located in another point. One or more unmanned aerial or ground vehicles (UAVs or UGVs) can be used for this purpose as communications relays. The decision variables are the number of unmanned vehicles (UVs) and the UV positions. The objective function is assumed to access the placement quality. We suggest one instance of such a function which is more suitable for accessing UAV placement. The constraints are determined by, firstly, a free line of sight requirement for every consecutive pair in the chain and, secondly, a limited communication range. Because of these requirements, our constrained optimization problem is a difficult multi-extremal problem for any fixed number of UVs. Moreover, the feasible set of real variables is typically disjoint. We present an approach that allows us to efficiently find a practically acceptable approximation to a global minimum in the problem of optimal placement of communications relay nodes. It is based on a spatial discretization with a subsequent reduction to a shortest path problem. The case of a restricted number of available UVs is also considered here. We introduce two label correcting algorithms which are able to take advantage of using some peculiarities of the resulting restricted shortest path problem. The algorithms produce a Pareto solution to the two-objective problem of minimizing the path cost and the number of hops. We justify their correctness. The presented results of numerical 3D experiments show that our algorithms are superior to the conventional Bellman-Ford algorithm tailored to solving this problem.


26th Congress of the International Council of Aeronautical Science Including the 8th AIAA Aircraft Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference | 2008

Route Planning for Relay UAV

Anders Holmberg; Per-Magnus Olsson


Archive | 2009

Optimal placement of communications relay nodes

Oleg Burdakov; Kaj Holmberg; Patrick Doherty; Per-Magnus Olsson


Archive | 2008

A Dual Ascent Method for the Hop-constrained Shortest Path with Application to Positioning of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Oleg Burdakov; Kaj Holmberg; Per-Magnus Olsson


Archive | 2011

Positioning Algorithms for Surveillance Using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Per-Magnus Olsson


dagstuhl seminar proceedings | 2010

Research with Collaborative Unmanned Aircraft Systems

Patrick Doherty; Jonas Kvarnström; Fredrik Heintz; David Landén; Per-Magnus Olsson


Archive | 2014

Methods for Network Optimization and Parallel Derivative-free Optimization

Per-Magnus Olsson

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