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Remote Drone-to-Drone Gas Sensing: A Feasibility Study

Patrick P. Neumann, Dino Huellmann, Nicolas P. Winkler, Jan Schugardt

2022 IEEE International Symposium on Olfaction and Electronic Nose (ISOEN)(2022)

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Abstract
Remote gas sensors mounted on mobile robots enable the mapping of gas distributions in large or poorly accessible areas. A challenging task however, is the generation of three-dimensional distribution maps from these spatially sparse gas measurements. To obtain high-quality reconstructions, the choice of optimal measuring poses is of great importance. Remote gas sensors, that are commonly used in Robot Assisted Gas Tomography (RAGT), require reflecting surfaces within the sensor's range, limiting the possible sensing geometries, regardless of whether the robots are ground-based or airborne. By combining ground and aerial robots into a heterogeneous swarm whose agents are equipped with reflectors and remote gas sensors, remote inter-robot gas measurements become available, taking RAGT to the next dimension - releasing those constraints. In this paper, we demonstrate the feasibility of drone-to-drone measurements under realistic conditions and highlight the resulting opportunities.
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Key words
Aerial robot,TDLAS,inter-robot measurements,gas tomography,plume
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