Open AccessBook
Introduction to Theoretical Kinematics
J. M. McCarthy
- 14 Feb 1990
730
TL;DR: The author applies to kinematic theory two tools of modern mathematics--the theory of multivectors and the theory of Clifford algebras--that serve to clarify the seemingly arbitrary nature of the construction of screws and dual quaternions.
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Abstract: "Introduction to Theoretical Kinematics" provides a uniform presentation of the mathematical foundations required for studying the movement of a kinematic chain that makes up robot arms, mechanical hands, walking machines, and similar mechanisms It is a concise and readable introduction that takes a more modern approach than other kinematics texts and introduces several useful derivations that are new to the literature The author employees a unique format, highlighting the similarity of the mathematical results for planar, spherical, and spatial cases by studying them all in each chapter rather than as separate topics For the first time, he applies to kinematic theory two tools of modern mathematics--the theory of multivectors and the theory of Clifford algebras--that serve to clarify the seemingly arbitrary nature of the construction of screws and dual quaternions The first two chapters formulate the matrices that represent planar, spherical, and spatial displacements and examine a continuous set of displacements which define a continuous movement of a body, introducing the "tangent operator" Chapter 3 focuses on the tangent operators of spatial motion as they are reassembled into six-dimensional vectors or screws, placing these in the modern setting of multivector algebra Clifford algebras are used in chapter 4 to unify the construction of various hypercomplex "quaternion" numbers Chapter 5 presents the elementary formulas that compute the degrees of freedom, or mobility, of kinematic chains, and chapter 6 defines the structure equations of these chains in terms of matrix transformations The last chapter computes the quaternion form ofthe structure equations for ten specific mechanisms These equations define parameterized manifolds in the Clifford algebras, or "image spaces," associated with planar, spherical, and spatial displacements McCarthy reveals a particularly interesting result by showing that these parameters can be mathematically manipulated to yield hyperboloids or intersections of hyperboloids
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Citations
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Sjriek Alers,Daniel R Claes,Joscha-David Fossel,Daniel Hennes,Karl Tuyls +4 more
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TL;DR: This demonstration shows how artificial intelligence can be successfully reintegrated into a noteworthy robotics solution and win the 2013 world championship title in the RoboCup@Work league.
Determination of rotation vectors from multi-point data and practical applications
TL;DR: The present work aims to present a different set of parameters for Euclidean motions which have a definite physical interpretation and are quite convenient for describing of rigid body and manipulators motions such as scene and image processing and recognition.
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Piecewise line-symmetric spherical motions for orientation interpolation in 5-Axis CNC tool path planning
C. Suárez,Qiaode Jeffrey Ge +1 more
TL;DR: The purpose of this effort is to put line-symmetric motions into use from the viewpoint of motion approximation and interpolation, and to present their potential applications in Computerized Numerical Control (CNC) machining simulation and tool path planning.
Applications of Fourier Methods on the Motion Group in Robot Kinematics
A. B. Kyatkin,G. S. Chirikjian +1 more
- 01 Jan 1998
TL;DR: The fast Fourier transform is applied to the problem of finding the workspace density of discretely actuated manipulators to compute convolution-like integrals that arise in robot kinematics and motion planning.
Development of a software library of functions for analysis of spatial mechanisms
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TL;DR: A software library of functions for displacement analysis of spatial mechanisms has been developed and can be readily used in theCH language environment, where dual number is treated as a first-class object.
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