Book Image

ROS Robotics Projects - Second Edition

By : Ramkumar Gandhinathan
Book Image

ROS Robotics Projects - Second Edition

By: Ramkumar Gandhinathan

Overview of this book

Nowadays, heavy industrial robots placed in workcells are being replaced by new age robots called cobots, which don't need workcells. They are used in manufacturing, retail, banks, energy, and healthcare, among other domains. One of the major reasons for this rapid growth in the robotics market is the introduction of an open source robotics framework called the Robot Operating System (ROS). This book covers projects in the latest ROS distribution, ROS Melodic Morenia with Ubuntu Bionic (18.04). Starting with the fundamentals, this updated edition of ROS Robotics Projects introduces you to ROS-2 and helps you understand how it is different from ROS-1. You'll be able to model and build an industrial mobile manipulator in ROS and simulate it in Gazebo 9. You'll then gain insights into handling complex robot applications using state machines and working with multiple robots at a time. This ROS book also introduces you to new and popular hardware such as Nvidia's Jetson Nano, Asus Tinker Board, and Beaglebone Black, and allows you to explore interfacing with ROS. You'll learn as you build interesting ROS projects such as self-driving cars, making use of deep learning, reinforcement learning, and other key AI concepts. By the end of the book, you'll have gained the confidence to build interesting and intricate projects with ROS.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Multi-Robot Collaboration

In the previous chapters, we have seen how to build a robot and simulate it in ROS. We also learned how to make our robot base autonomous and our robot arm intelligent enough to move to a pose in the environment. We also covered the waiter robot analogy (defined in Chapter 4, Handling Complex Robot Tasks Using State Machines), where we used multiple robots to collectively communicate between each other and serve customers, and using more robots to deliver products to houses (an application we defined in the previous chapter).

In this chapter, we will learn how to bring multiple robots into a simulation environment and establish communication between them. You will be introduced to a few methods and workarounds in ROS regarding how to differentiate between multiple robots and communicate effectively between them. You will also see the issues that arise...