Delay Induced Swarm Pattern Bifurcations in Mixed Reality Experiments

ORAL

Abstract

Swarms of coupled mobile agents with communication-time delay are known to exhibit multiple dynamic patterns in space, which depend on interaction strength and delay. We demonstrate experimentally delay-induced bifurcations between spatio-temporal patterns with two separate robotic platforms using a mixed-reality framework, and isolate parameter regions where transitions occur. We show that multiple rotation patterns persist in the presence of collision-avoidance and uncertainties in the real robot dynamics. Moreover, we show the existence of multi-stability of rotational patterns not predicted by usual mean field dynamics. Our experimental results increase understanding of swarm-pattern robustness in the physical world, and may form the basis for improved reproducible models of swarms with physical robots.

*We thank the NRL base funding program, N0001414WX00023, and the Office of Naval Research, N0001419WX01166 for their support.

Presenters

  • Ioana Triandaf

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory

Authors

  • Victoria Edwards

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • Ira Schwartz

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • Klementyna Szwaykowska

    • Georgia Tech Research Institute
  • Jason Hindes

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • M. Ani Hsieh

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Ioana Triandaf

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory