Getting Close Without Touching: Near-Gathering for Autonomous Mobile Robots
Linda Pagli, Giuseppe Prencipe, Giovanni Viglietta

TL;DR
This paper introduces the first deterministic algorithm enabling autonomous robots with limited visibility to nearly gather without collisions, thus overcoming visibility restrictions and enabling further tasks post-gathering.
Contribution
It presents a novel deterministic Near-Gathering algorithm for anonymous, oblivious robots with limited visibility, including termination detection without explicit communication.
Findings
Robots can nearly gather without collisions in finite time.
Termination detection is possible even with unknown robot count.
Algorithm works under realistic assumptions on initial configurations.
Abstract
In this paper we study the Near-Gathering problem for a finite set of dimensionless, deterministic, asynchronous, anonymous, oblivious and autonomous mobile robots with limited visibility moving in the Euclidean plane in Look-Compute-Move (LCM) cycles. In this problem, the robots have to get close enough to each other, so that every robot can see all the others, without touching (i.e., colliding with) any other robot. The importance of solving the Near-Gathering problem is that it makes it possible to overcome the restriction of having robots with limited visibility. Hence it allows to exploit all the studies (the majority, actually) done on this topic in the unlimited visibility setting. Indeed, after the robots get close enough to each other, they are able to see all the robots in the system, a scenario that is similar to the one where the robots have unlimited visibility. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptimization and Search Problems · Robotic Path Planning Algorithms · Robotics and Sensor-Based Localization
