Underwater Anchor-AUV Localization Geometries with an Isogradient Sound Speed Profile: A CRLB-Based Optimality Analysis
Existing works have explored the anchor deployment for autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) localization under the assumption that the sound propagates straightly underwater at a constant speed. Considering that the underwater acoustic waves propagate along bent curves at varying speeds in practice...
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Main Authors | , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
07.10.2018
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
DOI | 10.48550/arxiv.1810.03116 |
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Summary: | Existing works have explored the anchor deployment for autonomous underwater
vehicles (AUVs) localization under the assumption that the sound propagates
straightly underwater at a constant speed. Considering that the underwater
acoustic waves propagate along bent curves at varying speeds in practice, it
becomes much more challenging to determine a proper anchor deployment
configuration. In this paper, taking the practical variability of underwater
sound speed into account, we investigate the anchor-AUV geometry problem in a
3-D time-of-flight (ToF) based underwater scenario from the perspective of
localization accuracy. To address this problem, we first rigorously derive the
Jacobian matrix of measurement errors to quantify the Cramer-Rao lower bound
(CRLB) with a widely-adopted isogradient sound speed profile (SSP). We then
formulate an optimization problem that minimizes the trace of the CRLB subject
to the angle and range constraints to figure out the anchor-AUV geometry, which
is multivariate and nonlinear and thus generally hard to handle. For
mathematical tractability, by adopting tools from the estimation theory, we
interestingly find that this problem can be equivalently transformed into a
more explicit univariate optimization problem. By this, we obtain an
easy-to-implement anchor-AUV geometry that yields satisfactory localization
performance, referred to as the uniform sea-surface circumference (USC)
deployment. Extensive simulation results validate our theoretical analysis and
show that our proposed USC scheme outperforms both the cube and the random
deployment schemes in terms of localization accuracy under the same parameter
settings. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1810.03116 |