4.7 Article

Multi-Drone 3D Building Reconstruction Method

Journal

MATHEMATICS
Volume 9, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/math9233033

Keywords

drone; multi-drone; structure from motion; photogrammetry

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In the recent decade, the rapid development of drone technologies has made it easier to solve many spatial problems, such as the 3D reconstruction of large objects. This paper presents a method for centralized multi-drone 3D reconstruction that allows autonomous data capturing with drones equipped only with an RGB camera. The method relies on a multiagent approach, where a control center evenly distributes workload and independently supports all drones for simultaneous flights without a high collision risk.
In the recent decade, the rapid development of drone technologies has made many spatial problems easier to solve, including the problem of 3D reconstruction of large objects. A review of existing solutions has shown that most of the works lack the autonomy of drones because of nonscalable mapping techniques. This paper presents a method for centralized multi-drone 3D reconstruction, which allows performing a data capturing process autonomously and requires drones equipped only with an RGB camera. The essence of the method is a multiagent approach-the control center performs the workload distribution evenly and independently for all drones, allowing simultaneous flights without a high risk of collision. The center continuously receives RGB data from drones and performs each drone localization (using visual odometry estimations) and rough online mapping of the environment (using image descriptors for estimating the distance to the building). The method relies on a set of several user-defined parameters, which allows the tuning of the method for different task-specific requirements such as the number of drones, 3D model detalization, data capturing time, and energy consumption. By numerical experiments, it is shown that method parameters can be estimated by performing a set of computations requiring characteristics of drones and the building that are simple to obtain. Method performance was evaluated by an experiment with virtual building and emulated drone sensors. Experimental evaluation showed that the precision of the chosen algorithms for online localization and mapping is enough to perform simultaneous flights and the amount of captured RGB data is enough for further reconstruction.

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