Conic Frameworks Infinitesimal Rigidity
Abstract
This paper introduces new structures called conic frameworks and their rigidity. They are composed by agents and a set of directed constraints between pairs of agents. When the structure cannot be flexed while preserving the constraints, it is said to be rigid. If only smooth deformations are considered a sufficient condition for rigidity is called infinitesimal rigidity. In conic frameworks, each agent has a spatial position and a clock offset represented by a bias . If the constraint from Agent to Agent is in the framework, the pseudo-range from to , defined as , is set. Pseudo-ranges appear when measuring inter-agent distances using a Time-of-Arrival method. This paper completely characterizes infinitesimal rigidity of conic frameworks whose agents are in general position. Two characterizations are introduced: one for unidimensional frameworks, the other for multidimensional frameworks. They both rely on the graph of constraints and use a decoupling between space and bias variables. In multidimensional cases, this new conic paradigm sharply reduces the minimal number of constraints required to maintain a formation with respect to classical Two-Way Ranging methods.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2207.03310,
title = {Conic Frameworks Infinitesimal Rigidity},
author = {Colin Cros and Pierre-Olivier Amblard and Christophe Prieur and Jean-François Da Rocha},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.03310},
year = {2022}
}