
Maritime Autonomous Vehicles
Methods and measurements
Frank Ehlers(Editor)
Institution of Engineering and Technology (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 27. December 2025
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-1-83953-918-3 (ISBN)
Description
The maritime domain is of an enormous interest to our society, from the economy to health, and security. Operating in the maritime domain, on the other hand, is dangerous, expensive, and most of the time at low execution speed. Unmanned systems are in many ways suited to such environments, but the successful realisation of maritime autonomous vehicles requires an overarching design and development cycle, starting from design and modelling of unmanned systems, to control and implementation exhibiting a reliable and explainable level of autonomy and self-organization amidst the sudden and possibly extreme disturbances occurring in the uncertain and dynamic maritime environment.
The aim of Maritime Autonomous Vehicles: Methods and measurements is to embed design and practice in the digitalisation process, which is currently revolutionising engineering approaches in many domains, governed by model-based engineering paradigms and digital twin concepts. The coverage of the book connects design processes, good practices and methods, specifying their interfaces and standards for real-world measurements.
Written by a team of top-class international contributors, brought together by an expert in the field, this book provides an entry point into the hot topic of maritime autonomous vehicles - methods and measurements. The reader is invited to take a guided tour of the state-of-the-art in maritime robotics, and highlighted topics in coordination, communication, control, biomimetic design, and the real-world application of artificial intelligence tool chains for underwater datasets. The book presents a sophisticated simulation or surrogate model framework capable of addressing the necessity of maintaining holistically the interrelation of the many details real maritime environments need to have in order to be accurately described.
This thoughtful and authoritative work is intended to be a valuable source of information for researchers and engineers from academia and industry, working in the fields of navigation, robotics, radar, and of course maritime autonomous vehicles.
The aim of Maritime Autonomous Vehicles: Methods and measurements is to embed design and practice in the digitalisation process, which is currently revolutionising engineering approaches in many domains, governed by model-based engineering paradigms and digital twin concepts. The coverage of the book connects design processes, good practices and methods, specifying their interfaces and standards for real-world measurements.
Written by a team of top-class international contributors, brought together by an expert in the field, this book provides an entry point into the hot topic of maritime autonomous vehicles - methods and measurements. The reader is invited to take a guided tour of the state-of-the-art in maritime robotics, and highlighted topics in coordination, communication, control, biomimetic design, and the real-world application of artificial intelligence tool chains for underwater datasets. The book presents a sophisticated simulation or surrogate model framework capable of addressing the necessity of maintaining holistically the interrelation of the many details real maritime environments need to have in order to be accurately described.
This thoughtful and authoritative work is intended to be a valuable source of information for researchers and engineers from academia and industry, working in the fields of navigation, robotics, radar, and of course maritime autonomous vehicles.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Stevenage
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
526 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83953-918-3 (9781839539183)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Frank Ehlers is a principal scientist at the Bundeswehr Technical Center for Ships and Naval Weapons, Maritime Technology and Research (WTD 71) in Germany. He has worked as a scientist, project manager, program manager, or principal scientist in German and international research institutes dealing with maritime technology for over 30 years. His fields of research include signal processing, detection, classification, data fusion, coordinated distributed sensor systems, and autonomy for maritime scenarios.
Editor
Principal ScientistBundeswehr Technical Center for Ships and Naval Weapons, Maritime Technology and Research (WTD 71), Germany
Content
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Autonomy in the Maritime Domain
Chapter 3: Advances in Remote Estimation and Control with Quantised Communications for Networked Systems subject to Severe Bandwidth Constraints
Chapter 4: Collaboration of Multiple Underwater Vehicle-Manipulator Systems
Chapter 5: Propelling URSULA: Bioinspired Undulating Fins for Robotic Squid in Underwater Manipulation and Intervention Missions Laboratory Tests and Measurements
Chapter 6: Application of the Swarm-Capable Micro-AUV MONSUN for Monitoring of Vegetation and Water Quality in Lakes
Chapter 7: Reference Modeling for Automatic Target Recognition
Chapter 8: Surrogate Model Framework for Explainable Autonomous Behaviour in Maritime Robotic Systems
Chapter 9: Towards a structured framework for control performance and safety assessment for Maritime Autonomous Surface Ship
Chapter 10: Summary, Conclusions, and Future Work
Chapter 2: Autonomy in the Maritime Domain
Chapter 3: Advances in Remote Estimation and Control with Quantised Communications for Networked Systems subject to Severe Bandwidth Constraints
Chapter 4: Collaboration of Multiple Underwater Vehicle-Manipulator Systems
Chapter 5: Propelling URSULA: Bioinspired Undulating Fins for Robotic Squid in Underwater Manipulation and Intervention Missions Laboratory Tests and Measurements
Chapter 6: Application of the Swarm-Capable Micro-AUV MONSUN for Monitoring of Vegetation and Water Quality in Lakes
Chapter 7: Reference Modeling for Automatic Target Recognition
Chapter 8: Surrogate Model Framework for Explainable Autonomous Behaviour in Maritime Robotic Systems
Chapter 9: Towards a structured framework for control performance and safety assessment for Maritime Autonomous Surface Ship
Chapter 10: Summary, Conclusions, and Future Work