Robotic Subsurface Mapping Using Ground Penetrating Radar - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Robotic Subsurface Mapping Using Ground Penetrating Radar

PhD Thesis, Tech. Report, CMU-RI-TR-97-19, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, May, 1997

Abstract

The goal of our research is to develop an autonomous robot for subsurface mapping. We are motivated by the growing need for mapping buried pipes, hazardous waste, landmines and other buried objects. Most of these are large scale mapping problems, and to manually construct subsurface maps in these cases would require a significant amount of resources. Therefore, automating the subsurface mapping process is an important factor in alleviating these problems. To achieve our goal, we have developed a robotic system that can autonomously gatherand process Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) data. The system uses a scanning laser rangefinder to construct an elevation map of an area. By using the elevation map, a robotic manipulator can follow the contour of the terrain when it moves the GPR antenna during the scanning process. The collected data are then processed to detect and locate buried objects. We have developed three new processing methods, two are volume based processing methods and one is a surface based processing method. In volume based processing, the 3-D data are directly processed to find the buried objects, while in surface based processing, the 3-D data are first reduced to a series of 2.5-D surfaces before further processing. Each of these methods can be made very fast using parallel processing techniques, but they require an accurate propagation velocity of the GPR signal in the soil. On the other hand, the surface based processing method uses 3-D segmentation to recognize the shape of the buried objects, which does not require an accurate propagation velocity estimate. Both approaches are quire efficient and well suited for online data processing. In fact, they are so efficient that the current bottleneck in the subsurface mapping process is the data acquisition phase. The main contribution of the thesis is the development of an autonomous system for detecting and locating buried objects. Specifically, we have developed three new methods to find buried objects in 3-D GPR data. Using these methods, we are able to autonomously obtain subsurface data, locate and recognize buried objects. These methods differ from existing GPR data processing methods because they can autonomously extract the location, orientation, and parameters of the buried object from high resolution 3-D data. Most existing methods only enhance the GPR data for easier interpretation by human experts. There are some existing works in automated interpretation of GPR data, but they only work with 2-D GPR data. We implemented the three different methods to demonstrate an autonomous buried object retrieval system. In summary, we have developed a robotic system which makes subsurface mapping faster, more accurate and reliable.

BibTeX

@phdthesis{Herman-1997-14385,
author = {Herman Herman},
title = {Robotic Subsurface Mapping Using Ground Penetrating Radar},
year = {1997},
month = {May},
school = {Carnegie Mellon University},
address = {Pittsburgh, PA},
number = {CMU-RI-TR-97-19},
}