Carnegie Mellon University will unveil its latest robot and present lunar exploration technologies at a technology fair, “Meet Andy: Technology for the New Moon,” from 10 to 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 24, in the Planetary Robotics Laboratory, located on the first floor of the Gates and Hillman centers.
The robot is Carnegie Mellon’s contribution to an effort led by Pittsburgh’s Astrobotic Technology to land a robot on the Moon and win the $20 million-plus Google Lunar XPrize. The three-foot-long rover is designed to scramble up steep slopes and survive the temperature swings and high radiation encountered while exploring the Moon’s pits, caves and polar ice.
“Every extraterrestrial robot carries some DNA from Carnegie Mellon, but Andy would be the first true CMU robot to make the leap from Earth,” said William “Red” Whittaker, professor of robotics and director of the Field Robotics Center. “This is the culmination of lots of work by lots of people and is the next step toward Carnegie Mellon becoming a spacefaring university.”
Andy, which derives its moniker from university namesakes Andrew Carnegie and Andrew Mellon, was developed over the last nine months by a largely student workforce and drew on expertise and resources from across the university, including the School of Computer Science, the College of Engineering, the College of Fine Arts, and the Mellon College of Science.