SPIBOT: A Drone-Tethered Mobile Gripper for Robust Aerial Object Retrieval in Dynamic Environments
Gyuree Kang, Ozan G\"une\c{s}, Seungwook Lee, Maulana Bisyir Azhari,, and David Hyunchul Shim

TL;DR
SPIBOT is a drone-tethered mobile gripper system designed for robust aerial object retrieval in dynamic environments, effectively handling challenges like wind and shifting surfaces with real-time adaptive control.
Contribution
This paper introduces SPIBOT, a lightweight, tethered hexapod robot with sensors and real-time control for stable, autonomous target retrieval in challenging outdoor conditions.
Findings
Successfully retrieves 1kg objects on moving ship decks.
Operates reliably across diverse terrains and environmental conditions.
Converges quickly even with noisy initial data.
Abstract
In real-world field operations, aerial grasping systems face significant challenges in dynamic environments due to strong winds, shifting surfaces, and the need to handle heavy loads. Particularly when dealing with heavy objects, the powerful propellers of the drone can inadvertently blow the target object away as it approaches, making the task even more difficult. To address these challenges, we introduce SPIBOT, a novel drone-tethered mobile gripper system designed for robust and stable autonomous target retrieval. SPIBOT operates via a tether, much like a spider, allowing the drone to maintain a safe distance from the target. To ensure both stable mobility and secure grasping capabilities, SPIBOT is equipped with six legs and sensors to estimate the robot's and mission's states. It is designed with a reduced volume and weight compared to other hexapod robots, allowing it to be easily…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Path Planning Algorithms · Robotics and Sensor-Based Localization · Distributed Control Multi-Agent Systems
