[Documentation] [TitleIndex] [WordIndex

prairiedog_intro.png

The Prairiedog ROS stack contains all software necessary to run the Prairiedog robotic platform.

The Prairiedog robotic platform is being developed by Correll Lab at the University of Colorado at Boulder. It is built on the iRobot Create platform. The Prairiedog robotic platform is the 4th design iteration of an educational robotic platform developed within the Distributed Robot Garden project at MIT. In version 4, the robot is equipped with a more capable arm with position feedback, a laser scanner, and a netbook.


System overview

Nodes

The following is a simplified sketch of some of the system nodes and how they interact:

prairiedog_system_sketch.png

Coordinate Transformations

The tf package is used (by default) to facilitate transformations between the various coordinate systems. These include:

Additional coordinate systems that are used internally by prairiedog include:

/world_cu

The world coordinate system is assumed to use meters for units. A right-handed system is assumed. Orientation and translation can be defined by whatever GPS is used.

Note: If the tf package is NOT being used for coordinate transformations, we assume /world_cu = /map_cu.

/map_cu

prairiedog_map_axes.png

In the 2D map coordinate frame, the x axis goes from left to right and the y axis goes from bottom to top. /map_cu is assumed to be a right-handed translation and/or rotation of /world_cu.

Note: If the tf package is NOT being used for coordinate transformations, we assume /world_cu = /map_cu.

/robot_cu

prairiedog_axes.png

The local coordinate system of the robot is represented by the /robot_cu frame. Following ROS convention, x points out the front of the robot, y points to the left of the robot, and z points up. The origin is at ground level, under the center of the robot. /robot_cu is assumed to be a right-handed translation and/or rotation of /world_cu.

/scanner_cu

This coordinate system is currently defined as the center of the laser scanner, with x axis pointing in the direction of the first reading (i.e. reading with smallest theta), and z pointing toward the sky. Note that on prairiedog the laser scanner is mounted in a hanging configuration. /scanner_cu is assumed to be a right-handed translation and/or rotation of /robot_cu.


Configuration

After installing you will need to do the following steps (assuming that ROS is also already installed):


2024-11-16 14:52