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Depth sensors keys in robot navigation, says Digitimes Research

Jim Hsiao, DIGITIMES Research, Taipei

SLAM (simultaneous localization and mapping) is essential to navigation systems of mobile robots and there are various depth sensors used in SLAM including 2D and 3D LiDARs, stereoscopic cameras, laser ToF (time of flight) cameras, radars and ultrasonic radars, according to Digitimes Research.

Stereoscopic cameras are based on stereoscopic vision for depth sensing, while the other sensors aforementioned are based on ToF technology, Digitimes Research indicated.

As navigation of mobile robots entails self-localization, map building (mapping) and path planning, SLAM can simultaneously undertake the first two tasks and thus becomes a key navigation technology.

ToF consists of direct ToF (dToF) based on single pulse wave and indirect ToF (iToF) based on continuous wave, with the former superior in measurable distance but inferior in measurement accuracy and power consumption to the latter.

Stereoscopic cameras are increasingly used in SLAM because cost is lower than that for ToF-based depth sensors, while its performance is bettered by computer vision based on deep learning and improvement in vision algorithm. However, such depth sensors have the largest shortcoming that measurable distance is only several meters, much shorter than 10-100 meters for iToF and hundreds of meters for dToF, and errors in depth (distance) sensing get larger exponentially with increasing depth.