Field Testing of Utility Robots for Lunar Surface Operations
Conference Paper, Proceedings of AIAA Space '08, No. 2008, September, 2008
Abstract
Since 2004, NASA has been working to return to the Moon. In contrast to the Apollo missions, two key objectives of the current exploration program are to establish significant infrastructure and an outpost. Achieving these objectives will enable long-duration stays and long-distance exploration of the Moon. To do this, robotic systems will be needed to perform tasks which cannot, or should not, be performed by crew alone. In this paper, we summarize our work to develop "utility robots" for lunar surface operations, present results and lessons learned from field testing, and discuss directions for future research.
BibTeX
@conference{Fong-2008-10077,author = {Terrence W. Fong and Maria Bualat and Matthew Deans and Mark Allan and Xavier Bouyssounouse and Michael Broxton and Laurence Edwards and Rick Elphic and Lorenzo Fluckiger and Jeremy Frank and Leslie Keely and Linda Kobayashi and Pascal Lee and Susan Y. Lee and David Lees and Estrellina Pacis and Eric Park and Liam Pedersen and Debra Schreckenghost and Trey Smith and Vinh To and Hans Utz},
title = {Field Testing of Utility Robots for Lunar Surface Operations},
booktitle = {Proceedings of AIAA Space '08},
year = {2008},
month = {September},
keywords = {space exploration, planetary rover, Moon},
}
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