Sensors for Mobile Robots
Henrik Andreasson, Giorgio Grisetti, Todor Stoyanov, and Alberto, Pretto

TL;DR
This paper provides an overview of sensors used in mobile robots, detailing their types, features, and applications to facilitate perception, navigation, and interaction in robotic systems.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive taxonomy and description of common sensors in mobile robotics, including their functionalities and technological foundations.
Findings
Catalogs various sensors and their specifications
Explains sensor functionalities and applications
Provides foundational knowledge for robotic sensor selection
Abstract
A sensor is a device that converts a physical parameter or an environmental characteristic (e.g., temperature, distance, speed, etc.) into a signal that can be digitally measured and processed to perform specific tasks. Mobile robots need sensors to measure properties of their environment, thus allowing for safe navigation, complex perception and corresponding actions, and effective interactions with other agents that populate it. Sensors used by mobile robots range from simple tactile sensors, such as bumpers, to complex vision-based sensors such as structured light RGB-D cameras. All of them provide a digital output (e.g., a string, a set of values, a matrix, etc.) that can be processed by the robot's computer. Such output is typically obtained by discretizing one or more analog electrical signals by using an Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) included in the sensor. In this chapter we…
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