settlement site selection and exploration through hierarchical roving

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Settlement Site Selection and Exploration Through Hierarchical Roving Gregory Konesky SGK Nanostructures, Inc. Rutgers Symposium on Lunar Settlements Rutgers University 3-8 June 2007

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Settlement Site Selection and Exploration Through Hierarchical Roving. Gregory Konesky SGK Nanostructures, Inc. Rutgers Symposium on Lunar Settlements Rutgers University 3-8 June 2007. Man Or Machine?. Man Or Machine? YES!. NASA JSC. Machines Scout Ahead Man Soon Follows. NASA JSC. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Settlement Site Selection and Exploration Through Hierarchical Roving

Settlement Site Selection and Exploration ThroughHierarchical Roving

Gregory Konesky

SGK Nanostructures, Inc.

Rutgers Symposium on Lunar Settlements

Rutgers University

3-8 June 2007

Page 2: Settlement Site Selection and Exploration Through Hierarchical Roving

Man

Or

Machine?

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Man

Or

Machine?

YES!

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Machines Scout Ahead

Man Soon Follows

NASA JSC

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Man/Machine Synergism

NASA JSC

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Remote Teleoperated Man/Machine Synergism

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Teleoperation from the Moon

or from the Earth:

Lunokhod 1 (Arrival 11/17/1970)

Traveled 10.5 km

Lunokhod 2 (Arrival 1/15/1973)

Traveled 37 km

Approx. 1.3 second one-way delay

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On-site Rover Teleoperation for

Settlement Site Selection and Exploration

Provide “Ground Truth”

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Given cost of $1,000,000 / day

to support a Man on the Moon

Economic Leveraging effect of

Teleoperated Rovers

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Rover Size Affects Capability

NASA JPL

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Mars Exploration Rovers (MER)

Sojourner

Alpha Proton X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS)

Deployment Mechanism

Imaging

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Spirit/Opportunity

APXS

Rock Abrasion Tool

Microscopic Imager

Deployment Mechanism

Stereoscopic Panoramic Cameras

Navigation Cameras

Hazard Avoidance Cameras

Miniature Thermal Emission Spectrometer

Mossbauer Spectrometer

Magnetic Particle Detection

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Sojourner (1997)

Traveled a few hundred meters

Lasted a few months

Contact Lost

Spirit/Opportunity (2004)

Traveled tens of kilometers

Continue to operate today

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By chance, Sojourner landed in a strewn rock field.

It easily navigated around/between them.

Had Spirit/Opportunity landed there, they might

have had considerable navigation difficulty.

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Small size can be an enabling asset

When proceeding into unknown terrain, it would

be ideal to have both benefits at your disposal

→ Hierarchical Roving

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Payload Capacity and Distribution

- Small Rovers spatially distribute payloads

- Simultaneously sense a much larger environment

- Redundancy

- Navigation Agility

- Levels of Hierarchy

Large/Small Rover Tradeoffs

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Small Rover Specialization

Imaging

Sample Collection and Processing

Analytical

Manipulators

Collective Interaction of Multiple Small Rovers

on a Common Task

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Small Rover Specialization - continued

Imaging Applications

Navigation

Terrain Mapping and Understanding

Hazard Identification

Locating Areas of Interest for Visit by Other Rovers

Standoff Self-Imaging

Self-Rescue

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Carrier Rover Characteristics

Deploy/Recover/Transport Small Rover Fleet

Communications Relay Link between

Command Center(s) and Small Rover Fleet

Recharge Small Rover Batteries

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Traditional Approach

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Distributed Capability Approach

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Operational Scenarios –Identify Region of Interest

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Sample Acquisition and Analysis

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Multiple Analysis Vehicles

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Archive a Sample

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Rover Command Transmission

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Command Reception and Retransmission

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Design Example Characteristics

DimensionsVehicle: 52” Long, 34” Wide, 37” High

Carrier Bay: 31” Long, 24” Wide, 18” High

WeightCarrier Vehicle: 152 Pounds

Available Payload: 48 PoundsTypical Small Rover: 5-10 Pounds

Power66 Watts Solar Panels

56 Amp-Hr Lead Acid Battery Reserve

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Georgia Tech

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Levels of Earth-bound

Teleoperation Users

Vehicle Drivers (10 channels)

Active Viewers (500 channels)

Passive Viewers (unlimited)

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Conclusions

Hierarchical Roving represents a paradigm shiftin the decision between a large and small rover.

Best of both choices incorporated into one platform.

Provides the ability to sense/sample the environment from several mobile points simultaneously.

Multiple levels of Hierarchy are possible.

Page 58: Settlement Site Selection and Exploration Through Hierarchical Roving

Acknowledgements

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