Modern Robotics, Course 2: Robot Kinematics

This course is part of Modern Robotics: Mechanics, Planning, and Control Specialization

Instructor: Kevin Lynch

Skills you'll gain

  •   Numerical Analysis
  •   Control Systems
  •   Automation Engineering
  •   Applied Mathematics
  •   Engineering Calculations
  •   Torque (Physics)
  •   Mechanics
  •   Computational Logic
  •   Mathematical Modeling
  •   Virtual Environment
  •   Trigonometry
  •   Linear Algebra
  •   Simulation and Simulation Software
  •   Engineering Analysis
  •   Machine Controls
  • There are 4 modules in this course

    If so, then the "Modern Robotics: Mechanics, Planning, and Control" specialization may be for you. This specialization, consisting of six short courses, is serious preparation for serious students who hope to work in the field of robotics or to undertake advanced study. It is not a sampler. In Course 2 of the specialization, Robot Kinematics, you will learn to solve the forward kinematics (calculating the configuration of the "hand" of the robot based on the joint values) using the product-of-exponentials formula. Your efforts in Course 1 pay off handsomely, as forward kinematics is a breeze with the tools you've learned. This is followed by velocity kinematics and statics relating joint velocities and forces/torques to end-effector twists and wrenches, inverse kinematics (calculating joint values that achieve a desired "hand" configuration), and kinematics of robots with closed chains. This course follows the textbook "Modern Robotics: Mechanics, Planning, and Control" (Lynch and Park, Cambridge University Press 2017). You can purchase the book or use the free preprint pdf. You will build on a library of robotics software in the language of your choice (among Python, Mathematica, and MATLAB) and use the free cross-platform robot simulator V-REP, which allows you to work with state-of-the-art robots in the comfort of your own home and with zero financial investment.

    Chapter 5: Velocity Kinematics and Statics

    Chapter 6: Inverse Kinematics

    Chapter 7: Kinematics of Closed Chains

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