On orbital stabilization of a circular motion primitive for a dynamic extension of the Dubins car model
Artem Angelchev-Shiryaev, Pavel E. Aleshin, Anton S. Shiriaev, Pavel A. Shamanaev, Leonid B. Freidovich
THE PROBLEM
This paper focuses on Control & PlanningControlThe method used to make the robot move the way you want.. This paper solves the problem of making a Dubins car follow circular paths stably when standard Control & PlanningControlThe method used to make the robot move the way you want. methods fail. The key insight is that transverse linearization—normally the go-to technique for orbital stabilization—doesn't work directly here, so the authors provide explicit conditions and a non-standard coordinate approach that actually does work. Read the paper by tracking the Core ConceptsTaskThe job the robot is supposed to complete, such as pick-and-place, navigation, or drawer opening. definition, the Core ConceptsRobotA physical system with sensors and actuators that can observe the world and take actions. or data assumptions, and the evidence that supports the claimed improvement.
HOW IT WORKS
Task framing
Core method
Data and supervision
Evaluation evidence
KEY RESULTS
This paper solves the problem of making a Dubins car follow circular paths stably when standard Control & PlanningControlThe method used to make the robot move the way you want. methods fail. The key insight is that transverse linearization—normally the go-to technique for orbital stabilization—doesn't work directly here, so the authors provide explicit conditions and a non-standard coordinate approach that actually does work.
WHY DEVELOPERS SHOULD CARE
This paper solves the problem of making a Dubins car follow circular paths stably when standard Control & PlanningControlThe method used to make the robot move the way you want. methods fail. The key insight is that transverse linearization—normally the go-to technique for orbital stabilization—doesn't work directly here, so the authors provide explicit conditions and a non-standard coordinate approach that actually does work.
LIMITATIONS
The main limitation to check is whether the claimed behavior holds outside the paper's reported setup. That means testing across different Core ConceptsRobotA physical system with sensors and actuators that can observe the world and take actions. embodiments, scenes, objects, and data distributions.
WHAT COMES NEXT
The practical next step is independent reproduction with clear baselines, ablations, and stress tests. For a developer, the useful follow-up is to map the paper's Control & PlanningControlThe method used to make the robot move the way you want. assumptions onto a concrete Core ConceptsRobotA physical system with sensors and actuators that can observe the world and take actions. stack, then test the smallest version of the method that could run end to end.