Robot manipulator technologies for planetary exploration - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Robot manipulator technologies for planetary exploration

H. Das, X. Bao, Y . Bar-Cohen, R. Bonitz, R. Lindemann, Mark Maimone, I. Nesnas, and C. Voorhees
Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE Smart Structures and Materials, Vol. 3668, pp. 175 - 183, June, 1999

Abstract

NASA exploration missions to Mars, initiated by the Mars Pathfinder mission in July 1997, will continue over the next decade. The missions require challenging innovations in robot design and improvements in autonomy to meet ambitious objectives under tight budget and time constraints. The authors are developing design tools, component technologies and capabilities to address these needs for manipulation with robots for planetary exploration. The specific developments are: (1) a software analysis tool to reduce robot design iteration cycles and optimize on design solutions, (2) new piezoelectric ultrasonic motors for light-weight and high torque actuation in planetary environments, (3) use of advanced materials and structures for strong and light-weight robot arms and (4) intelligent camera-image coordinated autonomous control of robot arms for instrument placement and sample acquisition from a rover vehicle.

BibTeX

@conference{Das-1999-14868,
author = {H. Das and X. Bao and Y . Bar-Cohen and R. Bonitz and R. Lindemann and Mark Maimone and I. Nesnas and C. Voorhees},
title = {Robot manipulator technologies for planetary exploration},
booktitle = {Proceedings of SPIE Smart Structures and Materials},
year = {1999},
month = {June},
volume = {3668},
pages = {175 - 183},
}