Team CERBERUS Wins the DARPA Subterranean Challenge: Technical Overview and Lessons Learned
Marco Tranzatto, Mihir Dharmadhikari, Lukas Bernreiter, Marco Camurri,, Shehryar Khattak, Frank Mascarich, Patrick Pfreundschuh, David Wisth, Samuel, Zimmermann, Mihir Kulkarni, Victor Reijgwart, Benoit Casseau, Timon, Homberger, Paolo De Petris, Lionel Ott, Wayne Tubby

TL;DR
This paper details CERBERUS, a robotic system that combines legged and flying robots, which won the DARPA Subterranean Challenge by demonstrating advanced autonomous exploration and mapping in complex underground environments.
Contribution
Introduction of CERBERUS, a novel multi-robot system integrating diverse robotic modalities and resilient autonomy for underground exploration under challenging conditions.
Findings
Successful exploration and mapping in diverse underground environments
Reliable detection of objects of interest
High-level command and control by a single human supervisor
Abstract
This article presents the CERBERUS robotic system-of-systems, which won the DARPA Subterranean Challenge Final Event in 2021. The Subterranean Challenge was organized by DARPA with the vision to facilitate the novel technologies necessary to reliably explore diverse underground environments despite the grueling challenges they present for robotic autonomy. Due to their geometric complexity, degraded perceptual conditions combined with lack of GPS support, austere navigation conditions, and denied communications, subterranean settings render autonomous operations particularly demanding. In response to this challenge, we developed the CERBERUS system which exploits the synergy of legged and flying robots, coupled with robust control especially for overcoming perilous terrain, multi-modal and multi-robot perception for localization and mapping in conditions of sensor degradation, and…
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