#439808 Caltech’s LEO Flying Biped Can ...Back in February of 2019, we wrote about a sort of humanoid robot thing (?) under development at Caltech, called Leonardo. LEO combines lightweight bipedal legs with torso-mounted thrusters powerful enough to lift the entire robot off the ground, which can handily take care of on-ground dynamic balancing while also enabling some slick aerial maneuvers. In a paper published today in Science Robotics, the Caltech researchers get us caught up on what they've been doing with LEO for the past several years, and it can now skateboard, slackline, and make dainty airborne hops with exceptionally elegant landings.
Those heels! Seems like a real sponsorship opportunity, right? The version of LEO you see here is significantly different from the version we first met two years ago. Most importantly, while "Leonardo" used to stand for "LEg ON Aerial Robotic DrOne," it now stands for "LEgs ONboARD drOne," which may be the first even moderately successful re-backronym I've ever seen. Otherwise, the robot has been completely redesigned, with the version you see here sharing zero parts in hardware or software with the 2019 version. We're told that the old robot, and I'm quoting from the researchers here, "unfortunately never worked," in the sense that it was much more limited than the new one—the old design had promise, but it couldn't really walk and the thrusters were only useful for jumping augmentation as opposed to sustained flight. To enable the new LEO to fly, it now has much lighter weight legs driven by lightweight servo motors. The thrusters have been changed from two coaxial propellers to four tilted propellers, enabling attitude control in all directions. And everything is now onboard, including computers, batteries, and a new software stack. I particularly love how LEO lands into a walking gait so gently and elegantly. Professor Soon-Jo Chung from Caltech's Aerospace Robotics and Control Lab explains how they did it:
It's very cool how Leo neatly solves some of the most difficult problems with bipedal robotics, including dynamic balancing and traversing large changes in height. And Leo can also do things that no biped (or human) can do, like actually fly short distances. As a multimodal hybrid of a bipedal robot and a drone, though, it's important to note that Leo's design includes some significant compromises as well. The robot has to be very lightweight in order to fly at all, which limits how effective it can be as a biped without using its thrusters for assistance. And because so much of its balancing requires active input from the thrusters, it's very inefficient relative to both drones and other bipedal robots. When walking on the ground, LEO (which weighs 2.5kg and is 75cm tall) sucks down 544 watts, of which 445 watts go to the propellers and 99 watts are used by the electronics and legs. When flying, LEO's power consumption almost doubles, but it's obviously much faster—the robot has a cost of transport (a measure of efficiency of self-movement) of 108 when walking at a speed of 20 cm/s, dropping to 15.5 when flying at 3 m/s. Compare this to the cost of transport for an average human, which is well under 1, or a typical quadrupedal robot, which is in the low single digits. The most efficient humanoid we've ever seen, SRI's DURUS, has a cost of transport of about 1, whereas the rumor is that the cost of transport for a robot like Atlas is closer to 20. Long term, this low efficiency could be a problem for LEO, since its battery life is good for only about 100 seconds of flight or 3.5 minutes of walking. But, explains Soon-Jo Chung, efficiency hasn't yet been a priority, and there's more that can potentially be done to improve LEO's performance, although always with some compromises:
At this point in its development, the Caltech researchers have been focusing primarily on LEO's mobility systems, but they hope to get LEO doing useful stuff out in the world, and that almost certainly means giving the robot autonomy and manipulation capabilities. At the moment, LEO isn't particularly autonomous, in the sense that it follows predefined paths and doesn't decide on its own whether it should be using walking or flying to traverse a given obstacle. But the researchers are already working on ways in which LEO can make these decisions autonomously through vision and machine learning. As for manipulation, Chung tells us that "a new version of LEO could be appended with lightweight manipulators that have similar linkage design to its legs and servo motors to expand the range of tasks it can perform," with the goal of "enabling a wide range of robotic missions that are hard to accomplish by the sole use of ground or aerial robots."
It's also tempting to look at LEO's ability to more or less just bypass so many of the challenges in bipedal robotics and think about ways in which it could be useful in places where bipedal robots tend to struggle. But it's important to remember that because of the compromises inherent in its multimodal design, LEO will likely be best suited for very specific tasks that can most directly leverage what it's particularly good at. High voltage line and bridge inspection is a good start, and you can easily imagine other inspection tasks that require stability combined with vertical agility. Hopefully, improvements in efficiency and autonomy will make this possible, although I'm still holding out for what Caltech's Chung originally promised: "the ultimate form of demonstration for us will be to build two of these Leonardo robots and then have them play tennis or badminton." |
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