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Dive into the research topics where Takumi Matsuda is active.

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Featured researches published by Takumi Matsuda.


IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering | 2013

Navigation Method for Underwater Vehicles Based on Mutual Acoustical Positioning With a Single Seafloor Station

Toshihiro Maki; Takumi Matsuda; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura; Junichi Kojima

In this paper, we propose a novel navigation method for underwater vehicles based on a single seafloor station (SS), with which the vehicles can estimate their positions and orientations with respect to the SS without the need of expensive inertial navigation system or time-consuming calibration. This method is suitable for near-seafloor applications requiring real-time and accurate positioning, such as seafloor imaging and sampling. The method is also suitable for autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) since no other external aid is necessary other than SS. The key idea is to utilize mutual acoustical measurements between the vehicle and the SS. Simply explained: 1) the vehicle starts by interrogating the SS acoustically and measures the range between the two units as well as the bearing of the SS with respect to the vehicle in the vehicle reference frame; and then, 2) the SS computes the bearing of the vehicle with respect to the SS and transmits this information back to the vehicle using a similar acoustical device. By combining this information and inputting it into a nonlinear filter structure that includes measurements of the vehicles ground velocity and yaw angular velocity, the vehicle computes its position and heading estimates. A pair of acoustical devices named acoustical localization and communication (ALOC) devices that can communicate and calculate their relative positions have been built. Sea trials were carried out in October 2011 using the AUV Tri-Dog1 (TD) and a trial SS at Kagoshima Bay in Japan. The AUV successfully navigated around the SS based on the measurements of the ALOC device mounted on both the AUV and the SS. The performance of the method was verified through simulations based on the experimental results.


Marine Technology Society Journal | 2012

Performance analysis on a navigation method of multiple AUVs for wide area survey

Takumi Matsuda; Toshihiro Maki; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

A navigation method of multiple autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) is proposed in this paper, and a performance analysis on position estimation for a wide area survey is given. Alternating roles of the AUVs between Moving and Measuring Role (MMR) and Landmark Role (LR) is the key idea of the proposed method. AUVs in the MMR move based on the AUVs in the LR, while AUVs in the LR keep their positions on the seabed to act as landmarks for the moving AUVs. The two groups of AUVs can observe in a wide area, while maintaining a good position estimate, by alternating their roles. AUV position is estimated by mutual acoustic measurements of relative distance among AUVs and direction among them. In order to achieve a robust position estimate against sensor noises and lack of measurements, these position measurements are fused with other on-board sensors such as Doppler velocity logger (DVL), fiber optic gyro (FOG) and depth sensor by particle filter. The performance of the method was verified through navigation simulation based on the performance of sensors obtained during various experiments performed in a pool environment and at sea. In the simulation, the proposed method achieved a positioning error considerably smaller than dead reckoning and conventional navigation methods of a single AUV. Each AUV also achieved state estimation in the proposed method, suppressing deviation from its true position and heading due to alternating roles and evaluating outliers of positioning measurements by particle filter. It is evident that, compared with conventional navigation methods, the proposed method is suitable for a wide area survey without sensor drifts and deviation from true state.


ieee international underwater technology symposium | 2013

Docking method for hovering type AUVs by acoustic and visual positioning

Toshihiro Maki; ReyesTatsuru Shiroku; Yoshiki Sato; Takumi Matsuda; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

We propose a docking method for a hovering type AUVs at a seafloor station. Although hovering type AUVs are suitable for detailed surveys of local area, docking methods are currently less studied compared with ones for cruising type AUVs. This paper proposes a docking method for hovering type AUVs based on both the acoustic and visual positioning. The proposed method was implemented in the AUV Tri-TON and a trial station in order to verify its performance through tank experiments. The vehicle succeeded in docking at the station 13 times, which accounts for half of the total number of trials. The possible causes of the failures and improvement methods are also discussed.


symposium on underwater technology and workshop on scientific use of submarine cables and related technologies | 2011

AUV navigation with a single seafloor station based on mutual orientation measurements

Toshihiro Maki; Takumi Matsuda; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

We propose an AUV navigation method based on a single seafloor station. The key idea is acoustic mutual orientation and communication. The AUV firstly sends a signal to the station and then receives the reply with a hydrophone array to estimate direction and distance to the station. On the other hand, the station estimates the direction to the AUV by receiving the signal with a hydrophone array, and sends the information back to the AUV. Then, the AUV can estimate its position and orientation at the station-fixed coordinates without drifts. Furthermore, these measurements are fused with other on-board sensors such as DVL, angular rate gyro and depth sensor by particle filter, a probabilistic approach, in order to realize stable positioning robust against sensor noises and lack of measurements. A pair of acoustic device named ALOC (Acoustic LOcalization and Communication) has been built. A series of sea trials were carried out in September 2010 using a testbed AUV Tri-Dog 1 and a seafloor station mounted with ALOC at Kagoshima Bay in Japan. Although orientation measurements made by the station was not sent in real-time, the performance of the method was verified through simulations based on the actual measurements.


IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering | 2015

State Estimation and Compression Method for the Navigation of Multiple Autonomous Underwater Vehicles With Limited Communication Traffic

Takumi Matsuda; Toshihiro Maki; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

This study proposes a state estimation and compression method for navigating multiple autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) toward wide area surveys near seafloors. In the proposed method, a moving AUV navigates by referencing a stationary landmark AUV on the seafloor. By alternating the landmark role, all AUVs can cover a wide area while maintaining low positioning errors. The moving AUV estimates the states (positions and headings) of both moving and landmark AUVs by a stochastic approach called a particle filter. When AUVs exchange their landmark roles, they must share their estimated states. However, state sharing is precluded by the low data rate of acoustical communications in underwater environments. To overcome the problem, this paper proposes a state compression method in which AUVs approximate their states by “particle clustering” based on a clustering method (k-means) and a model evaluation method (Akaike information criterion). The compression method enables AUVs to share their states by communicating small amounts of data. The proposed method was evaluated in simulations of two AUVs navigating over a 300 × 300-m2 seafloor area. Throughout the simulation, the proposed method maintained stable positioning and successful state sharing with small communication data size.


ieee international underwater technology symposium | 2013

AUV Tri-TON — A hover-capable platform for 3D visualization of complicated surfaces

Toshihiro Maki; Yoshiki Sato; Takumi Matsuda; Ayaka Kume; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

AUV Tri-TON is a hovering type autonomous underwater vehicle developed by the University of Tokyo, launched in 2011. The vehicle was constructed as a testbed under the governmental project to develop instruments to estimate ore reserves in underwater hydrothermal deposits. The vehicles mission is to obtain dense, large-area 3D image of hydrothermal vent fields, in collaboration with a seafloor station. The information will be also used for environmental assessments, mine planning, and educational activities. Although the vehicle is not equipped with an inertial navigation system (INS), the vehicle can estimate its position in real-time with a precision enough for rough photo-mosaicking, owing to the mutual acoustic positioning with the station. The vehicle has two suites of imaging instruments looking forward and downward directions in order to image whole surface of bumpy hydrothermal vent fields. The vehicle has been tested through a series of experiments at tanks and real fields. In April 2012 the vehicle was deployed to the hydrothermal vent field of Kagoshima Bay in Japan and succeeded in observing seafloor with the area of around 200 square meters.


ieee/oes autonomous underwater vehicles | 2014

AUV Tri-TON 2: An intelligent platform for detailed survey of hydrothermal vent fields

Toshihiro Maki; Yoshiki Sato; Takumi Matsuda; ReyesTatsuru Shiroku; Takashi Sakamaki

The AUV Tri-TON 2 was built in 2013 under the governmental project to develop instruments to estimate ore reserves in underwater hydrothermal deposits, after the success of the prototype AUV Tri-TON [1]. The vehicle has two suites of imaging instruments looking forward and downward directions, in order to obtain dense, large-area 3D image of hydrothermal vent fields. The vehicle can follow rugged surface of hydrothermal vent fields at close range of less than 2.0 m. Although the vehicle is not equipped with an inertial navigation system (INS), the vehicle can estimate its position in real-time with a precision enough for rough photo-mosaicing, owing to the mutual acoustic positioning with a seafloor station. The vehicle has a strong ability of real-time path-planning to obtain a full-coverage 3D image of a rough, unknown seafloor in a single deployment [2]. The performance of the vehicle was verified through a series of sea experiments. At the first experiment, the vehicle succeeded in imaging seafloor with the area of 14 × 10 m. Then, the vehicle was deployed to hydrothermal vent field at Irabu Knoll in Okinawa Trough with the depth of 1,840m.


Marine Technology Society Journal | 2014

Path Replanning Method for an AUV in Natural Hydrothermal Vent Fields: Toward 3D Imaging of a Hydrothermal Chimney

Yoshiki Sato; Toshihiro Maki; Ayaka Kume; Takumi Matsuda; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) can operate without the need for human control or tether cables as long as there is sufficient energy. AUVs have recently been used for seafloor imaging. Visual observation by AUVs provides high-resolution color information of the seafloor. However, conventional observation techniques that follow a prespecified path offer limited coverage because it is impossible for operators to build a suitable path in unknown rough terrain. A flawed prespecified path will produce incomplete observation. If unobserved areas are found during postprocessing, another dive is necessary, which increases the total cost. To overcome this problem, the authors have proposed a path replanning method to realize high-coverage observation in one dive. With this method, the AUV evaluates unobserved areas after the first prespecified observation; if unobserved areas are found, the AUV recreates an appropriate path to cover what was missed. The validity of the proposed method was previously evaluated using an artificial target in a tank and in shallow seas at a depth of approximately 35 m. In this study, the feasibility of the method was validated in a more challenging setting: experimental data were taken from a hydrothermal vent field in Kagoshima Bay, Japan.


oceans conference | 2012

State estimation of multiple AUVs with limited communication traffic

Takumi Matsuda; Toshihiro Maki; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

In this paper, we propose a state estimation method for navigation of multiple Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) with limited communication traffic. Several positioning methods for a single hovering type AUV have been proposed in order to achieve different kind of missions. We had proposed a navigation method of multiple AUVs aimed at unexplored and wide seafloor surveys. In this method, the AUVs need to share their estimated states. However, typical data rates of acoustic communications in underwater environments are too small to share the states with each other constantly. In order to overcome the problem, we propose a state estimation method where the stochastic state estimator “Particle Filter” is applied to multiple AUVs. The information about the estimated states is approximated by “Particle Clustering” using a clustering method (k-means) and a model evaluation method by AIC (Akaike Information Criterion) to select the optimal size of clusters and reduce the required communication data size. Through simulations, the proposed method succeeded in stable positioning and reduction of the data size required to share.


oceans conference | 2011

Large area navigation method of multiple AUVs based on mutual measurements

Takumi Matsuda; Toshihiro Maki; Takashi Sakamaki; Tamaki Ura

In this paper, we propose a large area navigation method of multiple AUVs for accurate seafloor mapping over large area. The key idea of the method is alternating roles of the AUVs between “Moving and Measuring Role (MMR)” and “Landmark Role (LR)”. AUVs in the MMR move based on the AUVs in the LR. On the other hand, AUVs in the LR keep their stations to act as landmarks for the moving AUVs. By alternating their roles, the two groups of AUVs can observe a large area.

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Tamaki Ura

Kyushu Institute of Technology

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Junichi Kojima

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Masao Komazawa

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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