Subscribe by E-mail

Google Translate

Recent Assets

  • asteroid double Orion.jpg
  • wk2 cables closeup.JPG
  • Administrator WK2_FAA.JPG
  • side to rudder compressed.JPG
  • urm1 test.jpg
  • all video blog post pic.JPG
  • F9QualTank2.png
  • will whitehorn w560.JPG
  • WK2 Branson is seated.JPG
  • WK2 interior rear.JPG

X-ROB: Europe's €500,000 Moon and Mars robotic assembly study

| | Comments (1) | TrackBacks (0)
|

ESA Exoskeleton.jpg
credit ESA / caption: could Moon mission astronauts use robots to be super people?

The European Space Agency's Aurora core programme €500,000 ($640,000) EXploration Robotics Requirements and Concepts (X-ROB) study is investigating robots for assembly, inspection and the maintenance of space ships in low Earth, Moon or Martian orbit and for landers on the lunar surface

Based at the agency's technical centre in the Netherlands X-ROB will also examine robots for surface scouting and the assembly, inspection, and maintenance of "manned elements".

ESA's procurement information for X-ROB says

The study shall identify which tasks can be carried out by specific or general-purpose robot systems. The study shall also detail the needs for independent and crew-cooperative operation of the robot system. In addition, requirements shall be produced for a general-purpose robot system with a modular and re-usable architecture.

If its "crew co-operative" could astronauts use exoskeletons like the one in the pictrue above to move large surface modules by hand to assemble a lunar facility? I am hoping to get more information soon, especially about the robotic assembly of spacecraft in lunar orbit 

ESA has apparently already developed some of the modular elements for such a robot, like the limbs, joints and arms, as part of its rover projects, "Enhanced ExoMars" and "TEC technology roadmap", which was coordinated with ESA's space station remote manipulator EUROBOT development

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: X-ROB: Europe's €500,000 Moon and Mars robotic assembly study.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.flightglobal.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/44488

1 Comment

sclytrack

Well on Mars robots will have to "think" more or less by themselves, but those radiation hardened chips are still way to slow. I think robots in space should focus on being remote controlled by humans.

So do you have anything for on the moon yet?

Why hasn't anybody posted anything here? Are robotic projects that uninteresting?

Leave a comment

Want a user picture? Get a Gravatar!

Follow This Blog

Hyperbola Friendfeed