DocumentCode
1981884
Title
Robotics and autonomous technology for asteroid sample return mission
Author
Kubota, Takashi ; Sawai, Shujiro ; Hashimoto, Tatsuaki ; Kawaguchi, J.
Author_Institution
Inst. of Space & Astronaut. Sci., JAXA
fYear
2005
fDate
18-20 July 2005
Firstpage
31
Lastpage
38
Abstract
The MUSES-C mission is the world´s first sample and return attempt to/from the near Earth asteroid. In deep space, it is hard to navigate, guide, and control a spacecraft on a real-time basis remotely from the earth mainly due to the communication delay. So autonomy is required for final approach and landing on an unknown body. It is important to navigate and guide a spacecraft to the landing point without hitting rocks or big stones. In the final descent phase, cancellation of the horizontal speed relative to the surface of the landing site is essential. This paper describes various kinds of robotics technologies applied for MUSES-C mission. A global mapping method, an autonomous descent scheme, and a novel sample-collection method, and asteroid exploration robot are proposed and presented in detail. The validity and the effectiveness of the proposed methods are confirmed and evaluated by numerical simulations and some experiments
Keywords
aerospace robotics; asteroids; navigation; robot vision; MUSES-C mission; asteroid exploration robot; asteroid sample return mission; autonomous descent scheme; global mapping; near Earth asteroid; robotics simulator; sample acquisition; sample-collection method; space robotic exploration; visual navigation; Chemical technology; Delay; Earth; Instruction sets; Navigation; Orbital robotics; Robots; Space missions; Space technology; Space vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Advanced Robotics, 2005. ICAR '05. Proceedings., 12th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9178-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICAR.2005.1507387
Filename
1507387
Link To Document