Archive for robotic rover

Mars Rover Opportunity Travels Farther Than A NASA Vehicle Has Ever …

Opportunity rolling along the western rim of Endeavour Crater

Curiosity may be everyone’s favorite Mars robot these days, but it has a long way to rove if it’s going to catch up to the Mars rover Opportunity. Last week, Opportunity traversed 263 feet of Martian frontier near Endeavour Crater, bringing its total trip odometer up to 22.22 miles–the longest distance ever traveled by a NASA vehicle on the surface of a planet not named Earth.

Opportunity isn’t surpassing another robotic rover. During Apollo 17, Eugene Cernan and Harrision Schmitt drove the Lunar Roving Vehicle 22.21 miles over the lunar surface. That was in 1972–so suffice it to say, it’s taken NASA a while to cover the same amount of ground on Mars as we did during the Apollo missions, albeit under much different and more challenging circumstances.

But with this milestone Opportunity still isn’t the most traveled surface vehicle in the non-Earth solar system. That distinction belongs to the Soviet Union’s Lunokhod 2 robotic rover, which covered 23 miles of lunar surface in 1973. But that record is poised to fall to Opportunity in the coming weeks as well. This week the rover embarked on a multi-week journey from the area where it has been working for a couple of years now toward a target known as “Solander Point” about 1.4 miles away. Expect Opportunity to hit another space exploration distance milestone any day now.

[JPL]

Article source: http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2013-05/opportunity-now-nasas-most-traveled-planetary-surface-exploration-vehicle

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NASA rover Curiosity grabs first Martian rock sample

Computerworld - NASA’s super rover Curiosity has collected a sample from the inside of a rock on Mars, the first time the process has been done on another planet, NASA announced Wednesday.

The robotic rover sent images back to NASA scientists showing the drilling and an image of the powdered-rock sample in the rover’s scoop.

“Seeing the powder from the drill in the scoop allows us to verify for the first time the drill collected a sample as it bore into the rock,” said Scott McCloskey, NASA’s drill systems engineer for Curiosity.

“Many of us have been working toward this day for years, he said. Getting final confirmation of successful drilling is incredibly gratifying. For the sampling team, this is the equivalent of the landing team going crazy after the successful touchdown.”

The rover is about six months into a two-year mission to help scientists figure out if Mars has, or has ever had, an environment that could support life, even life in a microbial form.

The rover, which carries 17 cameras and 10 scientific instruments, has already found evidence of a thousand-year water flow on Mars. The finding came in the form of an outcropping of rocks that appeared to have been heaved up by a vigorous water flow.

Curiosity’s two Martian predecessors – the rovers Spirit and Opportunity – are not equipped for drilling.

NASA scientists have been eager to drill so they can analyze Martian rocks for information about its mineral and chemical composition.

Curiosity’s robotic arm bored a 2.5-inch hole into the rock on Feb. 8, taking in the powder the drilling created. After going through an onboard sieve, the powder will be delivered to Curiosity’s analysis instruments.

The rock that was drilled sits on a section of flat bedrock. NASA has dubbed the rock “John Klein,” in memory of a Mars Science Laboratory deputy project manager who died in 2011.

Scientists chose the rock for the rover’s first drill because they think it may hold evidence of an ancient wet environment. NASA hopes the rock’s composition may give them clues to its history.

Sharon Gaudin covers the Internet and Web 2.0, emerging technologies, and desktop and laptop chips for Computerworld. Follow Sharon on Twitter at Twitter@sgaudin, or subscribe to Sharon’s RSS feed Gaudin RSS. Her e-mail address is sgaudin@computerworld.com.

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Article source: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9236995/NASA_rover_Curiosity_grabs_first_Martian_rock_sample

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NASA to extend Mars exploration with another robotic rover

Computerworld - With NASA’s super rover Curiosity successfully investigating Mars, the space agency announced plans to extend its work there and even send up another robotic rover.

“The Obama administration is committed to a robust Mars exploration program,” said NASA Administrator Charles Bolden. “With this next mission, we’re ensuring America remains the world leader in the exploration of the Red Planet, while taking another significant step toward sending humans there in the 2030s.”

The next plan in the works is to build another robotic rover, equipped with scientific instruments, for launch in 2020. That will be a major step to support the goal set by President Barack Obama to send humans to Mars in the 2030s.

The next rover mission will be based on the Mars Science Laboratory architecture that carried the Curiosity on a nearly nine-month journey to the Martian surface this summer.

“The challenge to restructure the Mars Exploration Program has turned from the seven minutes of terror for the Curiosity landing to the start of seven years of innovation,” said John Grunsfeld, NASA’s associate administrator for science. “This mission concept fits within the current and projected Mars exploration budget, builds on the exciting discoveries of Curiosity, and takes advantage of a favorable launch opportunity.”

This plan for further Mars exploration comes on the heels of NASA’s August announcement that it also intends to explore the interior of Mars to discover why that planet developed so differently from Earth. That mission, dubbed Insight, is designed to discover whether the core of Mars is solid or liquid like Earth’s, and why Mars’ crust is not divided into tectonic plates that drift as they do on Earth.

Insight involves a lander that carries two cameras, a robotic arm and a thermal probe that will pierce the Martian surface to gauge the planet’s temperature. The lander is expected to launch in 2016.

Right now, NASA’s rover Curiosity is not the only machine exploring Mars.

Coming up on its ninth anniversary, NASA’s rover Opportunity is still at work on Mars. Opportunity, along with its robotic twin Spirit, were both launched in 2003 on a three-month mission. Both rovers far exceeded expectations with Spirit continuing work until 2010 and Opportunity still investigating the surface of Mars.

NASA has repeatedly said that robots are critical to the exploration of Mars and that they’ll even be used to help build a human outpost there someday.

In 2010, NASA announced that it was building a six-legged robot that can walk or roll on wheels and ultimately help set up a habitat on Mars for astronauts.

The robot, which went into development in 2005, is designed to move easily across the various types of terrain on the moon, on Mars or even on an asteroid.

covers the Internet and Web 2.0, emerging technologies, and desktop and laptop chips for Computerworld. Follow Sharon on Twitter at Twitter @sgaudin, on or subscribe to Sharon’s RSS feed Gaudin RSS. Her email address is sgaudin@computerworld.com.

See more by Sharon Gaudin on Computerworld.com.

Read more about Emerging Technologies in Computerworld’s Emerging Technologies Topic Center.

Article source: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9234396/NASA_to_extend_Mars_exploration_with_another_robotic_rover

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Curiosity Rover confirms source of ‘bright object’

A small piece of NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has apparently fallen off into the Red Planet dirt, scientists announced today (Oct. 9).

Curiosity team members spotted the odd bright object on Sunday (Oct. 7) while studying photos of the rover’s first Martian soil-scooping activity. Curiosity then spent much of Monday photographing the scrap further, allowing researchers to determine that it likely came off the 1-ton rover — though they’re still not sure what exactly it is, or if its absence will affect Curiosity’s mission appreciably.

“The rover team’s assessment is that the bright object is something from the rover, not Martian material,” mission team members wrote in an update today. “It appears to be a shred of plastic material, likely benign, but it has not been definitively identified.”

Researchers will continue to investigate the object for another day before deciding whether or not to resume processing of the soil sample, which remains in Curiosity’s scoop, the update added.

Yesterday’s close-up photos of the mysterious sliver were shot with the Remote Micro-Imager of Curiosity’s Chemistry and Camera instrument, or ChemCam. The rover will likely take more pictures of its surroundings today with its workhorse Mast Camera, researchers said.

This past weekend’s activities were the first test of Curiosity’s soil-scooping system, which is located at the end of its 7-foot (2.1 meters) robotic arm.

Samples from the scoop are designed to be dropped into two instruments on the rover’s body known as Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) and Chemistry and Mineralogy (CheMin). SAM and CheMin are two of the main tools Curiosity will use to determine if Mars could ever have supported microbial life.

The first few scoops are meant to clean out Curiosity’s sampling system, to ensure that any material delivered to SAM and CheMin in the future is purely Martian, without any oily residues left over from the rover’s construction and assembly here on Earth, researchers have said.

The $2.5 billion Mars rover Curiosity landed inside the Red Planet’s huge Gale Crater on Aug. 5 and is expected to spend the next two years or more roving about its Martian environs. At about the size of Mini Cooper car, Curiosity is the largest robotic rover ever sent to explore another planet.

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

Article source: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2012/10/10/curiosity-rover-confirms-source-bright-object/

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Astronauts may play role in Mars robotic missions

WASHINGTON (AP) — NASA’s future plans to explore Mars may end up using astronauts as space messengers.

The new idea surfaced as a special team looking for a new Mars robotic exploration plan released a preliminary report Tuesday.

One of the option calls for a Martian robotic rover to collect rocks on the red planet. Later, astronauts in a newly built spaceship would be used to pick them up from a cosmic delivery point somewhere between Earth and Mars and return them home.

The report gives the space agency several options with no specific timing for future missions and no decision is expected until next year. The new plan is needed because budget cuts earlier this year killed two future robotic flights.

The space agency has so far explored Mars with orbiters and robots, like the rover Curiosity that landed last month. The ultimate goal has been to get a robot to collect rocks and Martian soil to send to Earth for more detailed scientific examination.

Separately, NASA is working on new missions for astronauts to explore away from Earth, with an ultimate goal of sending them to Mars sometime in the 2030s.

The NASA team proposed combining both dreams, getting astronauts involved in Martian exploration earlier. But they wouldn’t exactly go to Mars itself. The astronauts would go somewhere between Mars and Earth and pick up the rocks left by a spacecraft that carried them off Mars.

That plan takes advantage of the new rocket and spaceship system for astronauts that should be ready in the next decade, said NASA associate administrator for sciences John Grunsfeld.

It also would lessen contamination worries about the Martian rocks. Scientists want to make sure that the Martian samples could not bring alien germs to Earth and that Earth organisms don’t contaminate the Martian sample, Grunsfeld said.

And it would help the mission to land humans on Mars because it “looks a lot like sending a crew to Mars and returning them safely,” Grunsfeld said.

The planning team looked at a few options for a Mars sample return mission:

—Send a bunch of spacecraft to Mars — a rover, a launcher to return home, an orbiter — in several launches.

—Package all those spacecraft into one or two launches that would save money but increase risk of failure.

—Send a bunch of small rovers to look around different spots of Mars to find the best samples and then design a system to collect and return those rocks.

Before that can happen, NASA still has to decide what robotic or orbiter mission it wants to send to Mars in 2018, if any. It’s a time when Earth and the red planet will be close and save money on fuel costs. Grunsfeld said NASA only has about $800 million budgeted for that, which is not enough for a major rover.

___

Online

NASA’s Mars planning group: http://www.nasa.gov/offices/marsplanning/home/index.html

Article source: http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-09-25/astronauts-may-play-role-in-mars-robotic-missions

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Astronauts may play role in Mars robotic missions

WASHINGTON (AP) — NASA’s future plans to explore Mars may end up using astronauts as space messengers.

The new idea surfaced as a special team looking for a new Mars robotic exploration plan released a preliminary report Tuesday.

One of the option calls for a Martian robotic rover to collect rocks on the red planet. Later, astronauts in a newly built spaceship would be used to pick them up from a cosmic delivery point somewhere between Earth and Mars and return them home.

The report gives the space agency several options with no specific timing for future missions and no decision is expected until next year. The new plan is needed because budget cuts earlier this year killed two future robotic flights.

The space agency has so far explored Mars with orbiters and robots, like the rover Curiosity that landed last month. The ultimate goal has been to get a robot to collect rocks and Martian soil to send to Earth for more detailed scientific examination.

Separately, NASA is working on new missions for astronauts to explore away from Earth, with an ultimate goal of sending them to Mars sometime in the 2030s.

The NASA team proposed combining both dreams, getting astronauts involved in Martian exploration earlier. But they wouldn’t exactly go to Mars itself. The astronauts would go somewhere between Mars and Earth and pick up the rocks left by a spacecraft that carried them off Mars.

That plan takes advantage of the new rocket and spaceship system for astronauts that should be ready in the next decade, said NASA associate administrator for sciences John Grunsfeld.

It also would lessen contamination worries about the Martian rocks. Scientists want to make sure that the Martian samples could not bring alien germs to Earth and that Earth organisms don’t contaminate the Martian sample, Grunsfeld said.

And it would help the mission to land humans on Mars because it “looks a lot like sending a crew to Mars and returning them safely,” Grunsfeld said.

The planning team looked at a few options for a Mars sample return mission:

—Send a bunch of spacecraft to Mars — a rover, a launcher to return home, an orbiter — in several launches.

—Package all those spacecraft into one or two launches that would save money but increase risk of failure.

—Send a bunch of small rovers to look around different spots of Mars to find the best samples and then design a system to collect and return those rocks.

Before that can happen, NASA still has to decide what robotic or orbiter mission it wants to send to Mars in 2018, if any. It’s a time when Earth and the red planet will be close and save money on fuel costs. Grunsfeld said NASA only has about $800 million budgeted for that, which is not enough for a major rover.

___

Online

NASA’s Mars planning group: http://www.nasa.gov/offices/marsplanning/home/index.html

Article source: http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-09-25/astronauts-may-play-role-in-mars-robotic-missions

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NASA robots may grab Mars rocks for astronauts to deliver back to Earth

One of the option calls for a Martian robotic rover to collect rocks on the red planet. Later, astronauts in a newly built spaceship would be used to pick them up from a cosmic delivery point somewhere between Earth and Mars and return them home.

The report gives the space agency several options with no specific timing for future missions and no decision is expected until next year. The new plan is needed because budget cuts earlier this year killed two future robotic flights.

The space agency has so far explored Mars with orbiters and robots, like the rover Curiosity that landed last month. The ultimate goal has been to get a robot to collect rocks and Martian soil to send to Earth for more detailed scientific examination.

Separately, NASA is working on new missions for astronauts to explore away from Earth, with an ultimate goal of sending them to Mars sometime in the 2030s.

The NASA team proposed combining both dreams, getting astronauts involved in Martian exploration earlier. But they wouldn’t exactly go to Mars itself. The astronauts would go somewhere between Mars and Earth and pick up the rocks left by a spacecraft that carried them off Mars.

That plan takes advantage of the new rocket and spaceship system for astronauts that should be ready in the next decade, said NASA associate administrator for sciences John Grunsfeld.

It also would lessen contamination worries about the Martian rocks. Scientists want to make sure that the Martian samples could not bring alien germs to Earth and that Earth organisms don’t contaminate the Martian sample, Grunsfeld said.

And it would help the mission to land humans on Mars because it “looks a lot like sending a crew to Mars and returning them safely,” Grunsfeld said.

The planning team looked at a few options for a Mars sample return mission:

—Send a bunch of spacecraft to Mars — a rover, a launcher to return home, an orbiter — in several launches.

—Package all those spacecraft into one or two launches that would save money but increase risk of failure.

—Send a bunch of small rovers to look around different spots of Mars to find the best samples and then design a system to collect and return those rocks.

Before that can happen, NASA still has to decide what robotic or orbiter mission it wants to send to Mars in 2018, if any. It’s a time when Earth and the red planet will be close and save money on fuel costs. Grunsfeld said NASA only has about $800 million budgeted for that, which is not enough for a major rover.

___

Online

NASA’s Mars planning group: http://www.nasa.gov/offices/marsplanning/home/index.html

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Article source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/nasa-robots-may-grab-mars-rocks-for-astronauts-to-deliver-back-to-earth/2012/09/25/3f68b0b0-075c-11e2-9eea-333857f6a7bd_story.html

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NASA Releases Stunning Shot of Curiosity From Orbit

NASA’s Curiosity is the largest and most advanced robotic rover to ever explore the surface of Mars. The pictures being produced by the mission are also some of the most stunning ever sent back to Earth by a planetary probe.

Take the most recent image distributed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory that’s making the rounds—a shot of Curiosity on the surface of the Red Planet taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter from space. The picture shows the rover itself and the tracks it laid down on the surface during one of its first treks away from its landing site.

We’ve collected that image and others in the accompanying slideshow to highlight the best photos from the Curiosity mission to date. Many have had their color enhanced to bring out details on the Martian surface.

View Slideshow
See all (12) slides


Tracks of My Gears


Chute to Thrill


Big Mountain


Armed and Dangerous

Curiosity landed on Mars in the wee hours of the morning on Aug. 6, 2012 (Eastern time) after a risky descent that had the Mission Control team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. —and viewers around the world—on the edge of their seats.

Just minutes after landing was confirmed, Curiosity’s orbiting partner transmitted the first dusty thumbnail images the rover had taken with her rear hazmat cameras. Two hours later, during the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter’s second flyover, high-resolution images came down showing rocks and the rim of Gale Crater, where the rover landed at a site named after the late science fiction writer Ray Bradbury.

There would be many more images from Curiosity in the weeks that followed, including a large batch taken by the rover and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter that were released by NASA several weeks ago.

High-resolution shots of Curiosity’s thrilling descent, meanwhile, were recently assembled by visual effects editor Daniel Fitch to create a composite video of the rover’s harrowing landing on Mars.

Photographer Andrew Bodrov also stitched together many of the Mars images to create a stunning, 360-degree panorama and a new video was released this week showing an animated demonstration of Curiosity’s instrument arm in action (below).

For more, check out the recent “Ask Me Anything” chat that Team Curiosity had on Reddit. PCMag’s Meredith Popolo was also at the JPL in California covering the Curiosity rover’s arrival on Mars. For more, see her tour of JPL. Also check out 7 Minutes of Terror: Landing the Mars Curiosity Rover and How to Hack NASA’s Curiosity Mars Rover.

For more from Damon, follow him on Twitter @dpoeter.

Article source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2409422,00.asp

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Curiosity Takes Its First Drive, Leaving Morse Code on Mars

Humans, via their robotic rover, are now leaving their mark on the Red Planet.

[optional image description]

When the creators of Curiosity built the rover that would explore Mars, they gave its wheels special treads. The marks left by Curiosity’s tires as they tool through the dust of the Martian soil won’t just serve as visual odometry markers, allowing Curiosity’s engineers to determine the rover’s orientation and distance traveled; they’ll also send a message. Specifically, this message:

short long long long
short long long short
short long short short

Which is also to say, in Morse code:

. – - -
. – - .
. – . .

Which is also to say, translating that code: J-P-L, the acronym for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory — Curiosity’s creator.

Yes. A calling card, coded into Curiosity’s every move. Which was feasible for JPL engineers this time around because of Curiosity’s advanced design. The wheels of Opportunity, Curiosity’s predecessor, had basic, square holes, which allowed the rover to be bolted to its lander during cruise and touchdown. Since Curiosity didn’t have a lander, though — the thing, famously, pretty much landed itself — JPL engineers suddenly had the freedom to create cleats in Curiosity’s wheels that were aesthetic rather than pragmatic in function. And the Morse-to-Mars tribute to their work is what they chose.

[optional image description]

So it’s worth celebrating that earlier today, the engineers’ eponymy came to fruition: The JPL has literally left its mark on Mars. The Curiosity rover took its first drive, skimming the surface of the Red Planet and leaving Pasadena’s coded calling card in its wake.

Which is also to say: Guys, we just put Morse code on Mars.

In the black-and-white image above — a mosaic made from 23 full-resolution frames, displayed in cylindrical projection — you can see a nearly 360-degree panorama of Curiosity’s cosmic vista, complete with evidence of the rover’s maiden voyage on Mars. The track marks captured by Curiosity’s navigation camera represent, all together, a dance that would make Arthur Murray proud: In its first, tentative drive, Curiosity moved forward 15 feet or so, then rotated 120 degrees and reversed about 8 feet. 

And that little pivot marks the beginning of Curiosity’s human-controlled wanderings on the Red Planet. Today’s trip was a test drive, meant to ensure that the rover is ready to take on more arduous journeys later in its life. And Curiosity, it seems, passed the test. Two weeks after it landed on the Martian surface, the minivan-sized vehicle is still only about 20 feet from its touchdown site (which is named, as of yesterday, Bradbury Landing). But the rover is ready to roll. And to send a message, with each foot forward, on behalf of those who brought it to life: As far as Curiosity may travel, its trail will always contain a reminder of where it came from.  

Article source: http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/08/curiosity-takes-its-first-drive-leaving-morse-code-on-mars/261453/

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Curiosity Leaves Morse Code on Mars

Humans, via their robotic rover, are now leaving their mark on the Red Planet.

[optional image description]

When the creators of Curiosity built the rover that would explore Mars, they gave its wheels special treads. The marks left by Curiosity’s tires as they tool through the dust of the Martian soil won’t just serve as visual odometry markers, allowing Curiosity’s engineers to determine the rover’s orientation and distance traveled; they’ll also send a message. Specifically, this message:

short long long long
short long long short
short long short short

Which is also to say, in Morse code:

. – - -
. – - .
. – . .

Which is also to say, translating that code: J-P-L, the acronym for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory — Curiosity’s creator.

Yes. A calling card, coded into Curiosity’s every move. Which was feasible for JPL engineers this time around because of Curiosity’s advanced design. The wheels of Opportunity, Curiosity’s predecessor, had basic, square holes, which allowed the rover to be bolted to its lander during cruise and touchdown. Since Curiosity didn’t have a lander, though — the thing, famously, pretty much landed itself — JPL engineers suddenly had the freedom to create cleats in Curiosity’s wheels that were aesthetic rather than pragmatic in function. And the Morse-to-Mars tribute to their work is what they chose.

[optional image description]

So it’s worth celebrating that earlier today, the engineers’ eponymy came to fruition: The JPL has literally left its mark on Mars. The Curiosity rover took its first drive, skimming the surface of the Red Planet and leaving Pasadena’s coded calling card in its wake.

Which is also to say: Guys, we just put Morse code on Mars.

In the black-and-white image above — a mosaic made from 23 full-resolution frames, displayed in cylindrical projection — you can see a nearly 360-degree panorama of Curiosity’s cosmic vista, complete with evidence of the rover’s maiden voyage on Mars. The track marks captured by Curiosity’s navigation camera represent, all together, a dance that would make Arthur Murray proud: In its first, tentative drive, Curiosity moved forward 15 feet or so, then rotated 120 degrees and reversed about 8 feet. 

And that little pivot marks the beginning of Curiosity’s human-controlled wanderings on the Red Planet. Today’s trip was a test drive, meant to ensure that the rover is ready to take on more arduous journeys later in its life. And Curiosity, it seems, passed the test. Two weeks after it landed on the Martian surface, the minivan-sized vehicle is still only about 20 feet from its touchdown site (which is named, as of yesterday, Bradbury Landing). But the rover is ready to roll. And to send a message, with each foot forward, on behalf of those who brought it to life: As far as Curiosity may travel, its trail will always contain a reminder of where it came from.  

Article source: http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/08/curiosity-takes-its-first-drive-leaving-morse-code-on-mars/261453/

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