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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen, Yihao, Yang, Yue
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.04156
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author Chen, Yihao
Yang, Yue
author_facet Chen, Yihao
Yang, Yue
contents We develop a deep reinforcement learning framework for controlling a bio-inspired jellyfish swimmer to navigate complex fluid environments with obstacles. While existing methods often rely on kinematic and geometric states, a key challenge remains in achieving efficient obstacle avoidance under strong fluid-structure interactions and near-wall effects. We augment the agent's state representation within a soft actor-critic algorithm to include the real-time forces and torque experienced by the swimmer, providing direct mechanical feedback from vortex-wall interactions. This augmented state space enables the swimmer to perceive and interpret wall proximity and orientation through distinct hydrodynamic force signatures. We analyze how these force and torque patterns, generated by walls at different positions influence the swimmer's decision-making policy. Comparative experiments with a baseline model without force feedback demonstrate that the present one with force feedback achieves higher navigation efficiency in two-dimensional obstacle-avoidance tasks. The results show that explicit force feedback facilitates earlier, smoother maneuvers and enables the exploitation of wall effects for efficient turning behaviors. With an application to autonomous cave mapping, this work underscores the critical role of direct mechanical feedback in fluid environments and presents a physics-aware machine learning framework for advancing robust underwater exploration systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_04156
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Deep reinforcement learning based navigation of a jellyfish-like swimmer in flows with obstacles
Chen, Yihao
Yang, Yue
Fluid Dynamics
We develop a deep reinforcement learning framework for controlling a bio-inspired jellyfish swimmer to navigate complex fluid environments with obstacles. While existing methods often rely on kinematic and geometric states, a key challenge remains in achieving efficient obstacle avoidance under strong fluid-structure interactions and near-wall effects. We augment the agent's state representation within a soft actor-critic algorithm to include the real-time forces and torque experienced by the swimmer, providing direct mechanical feedback from vortex-wall interactions. This augmented state space enables the swimmer to perceive and interpret wall proximity and orientation through distinct hydrodynamic force signatures. We analyze how these force and torque patterns, generated by walls at different positions influence the swimmer's decision-making policy. Comparative experiments with a baseline model without force feedback demonstrate that the present one with force feedback achieves higher navigation efficiency in two-dimensional obstacle-avoidance tasks. The results show that explicit force feedback facilitates earlier, smoother maneuvers and enables the exploitation of wall effects for efficient turning behaviors. With an application to autonomous cave mapping, this work underscores the critical role of direct mechanical feedback in fluid environments and presents a physics-aware machine learning framework for advancing robust underwater exploration systems.
title Deep reinforcement learning based navigation of a jellyfish-like swimmer in flows with obstacles
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.04156