Research on Autonomous Ship Route Planning Based on Time-Dynamic Theta* Algorithm Under Complex and Extreme Sea Conditions
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In complex marine environments, the safety and efficiency of ship navigation face dual challenges from static obstacles, such as shallow waters and islands, and extreme dynamic meteorological threats, such as typhoons. Existing path-planning algorithms often struggle to achieve an optimal balance between computational efficiency and risk-avoidance effectiveness when addressing high-frequency dynamic meteorological changes. To address this limitation, this study proposes a Time-Dynamic Theta* (TDM-Theta*) approach. From an algorithmic perspective, this method extends traditional any-angle path planning by introducing a temporal dimension to the search space. For maritime application, it integrates real-time significant wave height as a spatio-temporal dynamic constraint, thereby dynamically evaluating the actual impact of marine meteorology on ship navigability. Simulation tests were conducted through nine experimental cases designed under three typical navigation scenarios: unrestricted waters, complex terrains, and typhoon transits. The results demonstrate that the TDM-Theta* algorithm not only efficiently generates the shortest paths in statically complex terrains but also achieves a 100% proactive risk avoidance rate within the boundaries of the evaluated extreme weather scenarios with multiple concurrent typhoons, incurring negligible computational overhead and low path costs. This research provides robust theoretical and methodological support for real-time safe route decision-making for intelligent ships in complex and volatile environments.