
Reachability and Singularity
lesson
For real robots there are a few extra things to think about. Is a particular point actually reachable? Our old friend, singularity or gimbal lock reappears in the wrist.
lesson
For real robots there are a few extra things to think about. Is a particular point actually reachable? Our old friend, singularity or gimbal lock reappears in the wrist.
lesson
The workspace of a robot arm is the set of all positions that it can reach. This depends on a number of factors including the dimensions of the arm.
lesson
We learn the concepts of a robot’s task space and its configuration space, and the relationship between the dimensions of these two spaces.
lesson
We consider the most general type of serial-link robot manipulator which has six joints and can position and orient its end-effector in 3D space.
lesson
We consider a robot with four joints that moves its end-effector in 3D space.
lesson
We consider a robot with three joints that moves its end-effector on a plane.
lesson
We consider a robot, which has two rotary joints and an arm.
lesson
We consider the simplest possible robot, which has one rotary joint and an arm.
lesson
We start by looking at a number of different types of robot arm with particular focus on serial-link robot manipulators.
lesson
We recap the important points from this lecture.