Game-theoretical approach to decentralized multi-drone conflict resolution and emergent traffic flow operations (2308.01069v1)
Abstract: This paper introduces decentralized control concepts for drones using differential game theory. The approach optimizes the behavior of an ego drone, assuming the anticipated behavior of the opponent drones using a receding horizon approach. For each control instant, the scheme computes the Nash equilibrium control signal which is applied for the control period. This results in a multi-drone conflict resolution scheme that is applied to all drones considered. The paper discusses the approach and presents the numerical algorithm, showing several examples that illustrate the performance of the model. We examine at the behavior of the ego drone, and the resulting collective drone flow operations. The latter shows that while the approach aims to optimize the operation cost of the ego drone, the experiments provide evidence that resulting flow operations are very efficient due to the self-organization of various flow patterns. The presented work contributes to the state of the art in providing a generic approach to multi-drone conflict resolution with good macroscopic flow performance characteristics. The approach enables relatively straightforward inclusion of error due to sensing and communication. The approach also allows for including different risk levels (e.g., for malfunctioning of sensor and communication technology), priority rules, regulations, and higher-level control signals (e.g., routing, dynamic speed limits).