posted on 1996-01-01, 00:00authored byNina B. Zumel, Michael Erdmann
Manipulation without prehension is a natural way of handling
objects for both humans and machines. Nonprehensile operations
are appropriate when complete constraint over the object to be
manipulated is either undesirable or impractical, but some control
over the object is desired over its entire trajectory, in order to bring
the object reliably to a desired final state. Research to date has
explored only a small portion of this class. We are interested in
controlling the shape of the constraint surfaces so that constraint
and external forces naturally attract the system to the desired state,
even if the object momentarily loses stability during the motion.
We present a preliminary analysis of the nonprehensile orientation
of planar objects by two low friction palms joined at a central
hinge. These palms support an object in a gravitational field,
without grasping or gripping. We determine connected regions
of stable states of the object, and give a method of planning part
orientation based on a graph search over these regions, allowing
non-equilibrium transitions between them. We conclude with the
the results of simulations and tests of an example plan.