Evolving directions in NASA's planetary rover requirements and technology
Abstract
The evolution of NASA's planning for planetary rovers (that is robotic vehicles which may be deployed on planetary bodies for exploration, science analysis, and construction) and some of the technology that was developed to achieve the desired capabilities is reviewed. The program is comprised of a variety of vehicle sizes and types in order to accommodate a range of potential user needs. This includes vehicles whose weight spans a few kilograms to several thousand kilograms; whose locomotion is implemented using wheels, tracks, and legs; and whose payloads vary from microinstruments to large scale assemblies for construction. Robotic vehicles and their associated control systems, developed in the late 1980's as part of a proposed Mars Rover Sample Return (MRSR) mission, are described. Goals suggested at the time for such a MRSR mission included navigating for one to two years across hundreds of kilometers of Martian surface; traversing a diversity of rugged, unknown terrain; collecting and analyzing a variety of samples; and bringing back selected samples to the lander for return to Earth. Current plans (considerably more modest) which have evolved both from technological 'lessons learned' in the previous period, and modified aspirations of NASA missions are presented. Some of the demonstrated capabilities of the developed machines and the technologies which made these capabilities possible are described.
- Publication:
-
Missions, Technologies, and Design of Planetary Mobile Vehicles
- Pub Date:
- January 1993
- Bibcode:
- 1993dpmv.book..443W
- Keywords:
-
- Mission Planning;
- Planetary Surfaces;
- Robotics;
- Roving Vehicles;
- Control Systems Design;
- Locomotion;
- Nasa Space Programs;
- Requirements;
- Space Exploration;
- Systems Engineering;
- Mechanical Engineering