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Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico

You're reading from  Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803246079
Pages 400 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Danny Staple Danny Staple
Profile icon Danny Staple

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface Part 1: The Basics – Preparing for Robotics with Raspberry Pi Pico
Chapter 1: Planning a Robot with Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 2: Preparing Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 3: Designing a Robot Chassis in FreeCAD Chapter 4: Building a Robot around Pico Chapter 5: Driving Motors with Raspberry Pi Pico Part 2: Interfacing Raspberry Pi Pico with Simple Sensors and Outputs
Chapter 6: Measuring Movement with Encoders on Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 7: Planning and Shopping for More Devices Chapter 8: Sensing Distances to Detect Objects with Pico Chapter 9: Teleoperating a Raspberry Pi Pico Robot with Bluetooth LE Part 3: Adding More Robotic Behaviors to Raspberry Pi Pico
Chapter 10: Using the PID Algorithm to Follow Walls Chapter 11: Controlling Motion with Encoders on Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 12: Detecting Orientation with an IMU on Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 13: Determining Position Using Monte Carlo Localization Chapter 14: Continuing Your Journey – Your Next Robot Index Other Books You May Enjoy

How distance sensing works

Before diving into connecting and programming distance sensors, we should examine how they operate. Chapter 7, Planning and Shopping for More Devices, evaluated options and chose optical (light-based) distance sensors. We will be focusing on this type for the remainder of this chapter.

Many distance sensors operate using a principle known as time of flight. The following diagram demonstrates this:

Figure 8.1 – Optical distance sensor operation

The preceding diagram shows pictures of robots with sensors and the returned light. On the top left, a single beam is emitted (shown as a cone), hits an object, and its reflection (shown as a dashed line) hits the sensor (the blue box), which detects it. The time between emitting the beam and receiving the response is the time of flight used to calculate the distance. At the top right of the diagram, both sensors are active. However, the left sensor detects a closer object in its beam...

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