DocumentCode :
2407894
Title :
Demonstrations of gravity-independent mobility and drilling on natural rock using microspines
Author :
Parness, Aaron ; Frost, Matthew ; King, Jonathan P. ; Thatte, Nitish
Author_Institution :
NASA Jet Propulsion Lab., Callifornia Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
14-18 May 2012
Firstpage :
3547
Lastpage :
3548
Abstract :
The video presents microspine-based anchors being developed for gripping rocks on the surfaces of comets and asteroids, or for use on cliff faces and lava tubes on Mars. Two types of anchor prototypes are shown on supporting forces in all directions away from the rock; >;160 N tangent, >;150 N at 45°, and >;180 N normal to the surface of the rock. A compliant robotic ankle with two active degrees of freedom interfaces these anchors to the Lemur IIB robot for future climbing trials. Finally, a rotary percussive drill is shown coring into rock regardless of gravitational orientation. As a harder-than-zero-g proof of concept, inverted drilling was performed creating 20mm diameter boreholes 83 mm deep in vesicular basalt samples while retaining 12 mm diameter rock cores in 3-6 pieces.
Keywords :
Mars; aerospace robotics; anchors; asteroids; comets; drilling; minerals; mobile robots; planetary rocks; planetary surfaces; Lemur IIB robot; Mars; asteroid surface; cliff faces; comet surface; compliant robotic ankle; drilling; gravity-independent mobility; harder-than-zero-g proof of concept; inverted drilling; lava tubes; microspine-based anchors; microspines; natural rock; rock gripping; rotary percussive drill; two active degrees of freedom interfaces; video; Educational robots; Mars; NASA; Propulsion; Rocks; USA Councils;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2012 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Saint Paul, MN
ISSN :
1050-4729
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1403-9
Electronic_ISBN :
1050-4729
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICRA.2012.6224692
Filename :
6224692
Link To Document :
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