Skip to page main content
NASA Logo - Mars Astrobiology Magazine - Mars Exploration - Red Planet - terrestrial planet - Mars Exploration: Mars, Red Planet, Mars exploration rover mission, Beagle, NASA, ESA, martian, pathfinder, mars life + View the NASA Portal
FIND IT @ NASA
NASA HomepageMars Astrobiology Magazine - Mars Exploration - Red Planet - terrestrial planet - Mars Exploration: Mars, Red Planet, Mars exploration rover mission, Beagle, NASA, ESA, martian, pathfinder, mars life
Home Science and Research Datasets and Images Publications Multimedia
Main Menu
· Home
· Subscribe
· Calendar
· Browse
· Astrobio Edition
· SETI Edition
· Edición Española
· Robotics Edition

Features
· Photo Gallery
· All Topics
· Earth and Mars
· Imagery
· Landers
· Life
· Mappers
· Meteors
· Missions
· Rocks
· Terraform
· Water
· Weather

Find It
· Most Recent
· Monthlies
· Advanced Search

Net Serivices
· Syndication
· Random Start
· Daily Rotation
· Book Reviews
· Bare-Bones

Sound Off
· Spread the World
Periscope





Space Channel

 
Roadtest for Robots
Earth and Mars Summary (Apr 05, 2003): A series of robot experiments are planned to prepare for exploring Mars. The robots will begin their roadtests by travelling unsupervised more than a 100 miles across the driest place on Earth.

Display Options: Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page


rover_credit: NASA

Roadtest for Robots

based on Carnegie Mellon release

A team of Carnegie Mellon University and NASA scientists will travel to the Atacama Desert in northern Chile in April to conduct research that will help them develop and deploy a robot and instruments that may someday enable other robots to find life on Mars. The researchers will be using the Atacama, described as the most arid region on Earth, as a Martian analog.

The group is funded with a $3 million, three-year grant from NASA to the university's Robotics Institute. They are collaborating with scientists at Carnegie Mellon's Molecular Biosensor and Imaging Center who have a separate $900,000 grant from NASA to develop fluorescent dyes and automated microscopes that the robot will eventually use to locate various forms of life.

mars_rover
A simulated image of the new Mars rover carrying the Athena science instruments.
Credit: NASA

The project falls under NASA's Astrobiology Science and Technology for Exploring Planets or ASTEP program, which concentrates on pushing the limits of technology in harsh environments. NASA experts believe that by pushing the known limits of life on Earth scientists will be better prepared to search for life on other worlds.

"Our goal is to make genuine discoveries about the limits of life on Earth and to generate knowledge that can be applied to future NASA missions to Mars," said project leader David Wettergreen, a research scientist at Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute. "We will conduct three annual field experiments in the Atacama. Each time, an increasingly capable robot will use sensing and intelligence to find land forms or environmental conditions that could harbor life."

This year, the team will be using an autonomous, solar-powered robot named Hyperion to determine the optimum design, software and instrumentation for a new robot that will be used in the more extensive experiments to be conducted over the next two years. In 2001, Hyperion was taken to Devon Island in the Canadian Arctic where it successfully demonstrated a concept called Sun-Synchronous Navigation. It tracked the sun as a source of power and explored its surroundings as it traveled continuously through a 24-hour period of daylight.

Extreme Explorers' Hall of Fame
The wide angle view of the martian north polar cap was acquired on March 13, 1999, during early northern summer. The light-toned surfaces are residual water ice that remains through the summer season. The nearly circular band of dark material surrounding the cap consists mainly of sand dunes formed and shaped by wind. The north polar cap is roughly 1100 kilometers (680 miles) across.Credit: NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems

During this year's visit to the Atacama, researchers will focus on measurements and experiments with the robot's hardware and software components. They will test Hyperion as it travels through the desert and collect data with scientific instruments, including a fluorescence imager, near-infrared spectrometer and a high-resolution panoramic imager.

Wettergreen said that Hyperion would travel some 10 kilometers through the desert this year while the researchers study issues related to robotic autonomy. The robot's solar panels have been laid flat on top of its body for the upcoming experiments so it can capture the maximum amount of sunlight in the equatorial environment. In the Arctic, the panels were mounted vertically, like sails on a boat, because the sun was often low on the horizon.

What's Next

A next generation robot, developed from the findings of this year's work, should perform 50 kilometers of autonomous traverse in the desert in 2004. In 2005, the final year of the project, a robot equipped with a full array of instruments should operate autonomously as it travels 200 kilometers over a two-month period. During this climactic journey, the robot should map sites where life is abundant, and then move into drier areas where life has not been detected.

Extreme Explorers' Hall of Fame
One Scoutlander design drawing as envisioned on Mars. Credit: NASA/JPL Mars Exploration Art

In 2005, plans call for the science team to operate as if it were exploring Mars in a scenario that would include a time delay and limited communication. "We'll operate under the constraints of Martian exploration in order to better develop procedures for seeking life on another planet," Wettergreen said. "The robot will monitor its own power, balance, locomotion, communication and science operations as it goes. It needs to be able to move into unknown terrain using cameras and internal sensors--the same instruments and information that would be available to a robot exploring Mars."

Nathalie Cabrol, a planetary scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center and the SETI Institute, will lead the science team for the investigation of the Atacama. Members of the science team are geologists and biologists who study both Earth and Mars at institutions including NASA Ames and the Johnson Space Center, SETI Institute, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the University of Arizona, the University of Tennessee, Carnegie Mellon and Universidad Catolica del Norte (Chile).

"Their role in the first-year campaign will be to become acquainted with the data sent by the rover and assess the validity of astrobiological exploration strategies that will be used in the 2004 and 2005 field campaigns and on future missions to search for habitats and life on Mars," said Cabrol.

Also under development is the capability for education and science communities to experience the mission through the EventScope interface. EventScope converts data from rovers and orbiters into three-dimensional "virtual worlds" that realistically represent remote sites, enabling students to experience the mission from their classroom computers.

NASA will soon launch two missions to Mars. Known, temporarily, as Mars Exploration Rover (MER) A and B, the two rovers will land in different regions of Mars to search for evidence of water in Mars's past.
EventScope's team is directed by Peter Coppin, a research scientist at Carnegie Mellon's STUDIO for Creative Inquiry, and includes experts in software engineering, interactive art and educational technology working to develop next generation tools for public remote experience. The goal is to have hundreds of students participating remotely in the Atacama experiment by the end of 2005. In addition to Wettergreen, the Carnegie Mellon team heading to the Atacama includes William L. "Red" Whittaker, the Robotics Institute's Fredkin research professor and the project's principal investigator; Alan S. Waggoner, professor of biological sciences and director of Molecular Biosensor and Imaging Center; James P. Teza, research engineer; Michael D. Wagner, research programmer, and Robotics Institute doctoral students Christopher Urmson, Paul Tompkins, Denis Strelow and Vandi Verma.

Related Web Pages

Red Rovers: Returning to Mars
Mars Exploration Website
Two Mars Rover Sites Get Science Stamp of Approval
Missions
Updated from the Wires



Note: Mars Life: [2003-04-05]
Display Options: Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page

Saturday, April 05, 2003
Roadtest for Robots | Login/Create an account | 1 Comment
Threshold
Comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
3yeB (Score: 0)
by Anonymous on May 31, 2007 - 05:45 AM
Seductive blonde virgin teen undressing and posing naked Christine Young Porn 40 y.o. brunette in stockings licking balls and getting her hairy ... Porn Star Videos Hot blonde ***** stretches her hungry ***** with monstrous black dildo Pregnant Big Bellies Gallery A cute cheerleader ***** fucked Free Shaved ***** Mature: splendid sweet sexy housewife showing her hairy charming ... Brunette Sex Teen - hot karina kay deepthroats and ***** Nude Shaved Teen Boys Glamour sexy blonde jana cova licking her own boobs Shemale Tushy Gorgeous asian teen kat shows her hot nude body and dance Drunk Whores Brunette flashes and gets fucked in public while people watch Female Ejaculation Fluid Horny shemale slut posing in lingerie and showing her dick Amateur Striptease Brunette babe visits her kinky doctor for a naughty gyno exam Asian Cocksuckers Richly endowed blonde babe getting her crack filled to the limits Webcam Teens Brazillian guy fucked by tranny girlfriend Nipple Licking Two babes sharing horny penis Secretary Anal Sex Hot babe having some intense anal stimulation using a long string... Upskirt Amateur Hot fully clothed babes and horny guys have sticky foursome Female Vulva Caught hentai foursome fucked Virgin Deflowered Young horny twinks dick sucking and ass pounding orgy session Voyeur Dressing


 
Credits Feedback Related Links Sitemap
FIRST GOV + Privacy, Security, Notices
+ Syndication Help
+ RSS Syndication
Home Page + Website Designed & Curated: Mobular Technologies
+ Chief Editor & Executive Producer: Helen Matsos
+ Daily Calendar Syndication