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High Wire Walker

iml_S8-walker.gif

Challenge:
Design a control system to balance the high wire walker.

Description:
The high wire walker experiment (HWW) is a system, which is dynamically equivalent to the tightrope circus walker. It consists of a body that resembles an "inverted obelisk" with a sharp bottom making it unstable in the vertical position. A motor is mounted to the body which can apply a torque to a long beam mounted in front of the body. The moment of inertia of the stick is much higher than the body and can thus be used as a "fixed" inertial frame against which the torque applied by the motor can be used to keep the body upright. The fall of the body relative to the vertical axis however cannot be measured. An instrumented pendulum mounted to the body swivels as the body falls and is used to estimate the fall of the body relative to the vertical axis. Although the dynamics of the pendulum movements are very different from the falling body, an observer (Kalman filter) has been designed to estimate the body angle relative to the vertical axis. The observer state and the measured states are then utilized to stabilize the entire structure.

Difficulty:
Undergraduate advanced / Graduate / Research


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