DocumentCode
3482045
Title
Lunar base construction robots
Author
Brooks, R.A. ; Maes, Pieter-Jan ; Mataric, Maja J. ; More, Grinell
Author_Institution
Artificial Intelligence Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
fYear
1990
fDate
3-6 Jul 1990
Firstpage
389
Abstract
President Bush called for the construction of a permanently manned lunar base. All serious plans for such a base require the use of lunar soil as shielding material against the Sun´s radiation. Plans rely on the use of a large bulldozer-like vehicle to be driven by an astronaut, either locally or under teleoperation control. Brooks and Flynn (89) proposed an alternate approach to a single large and complex robot based on many small totally autonomous robots which trade off time to achieve the task with lowered complexity and cost of the system. In this paper the authors describe an experimental system they are building with 20 small bulldozers, which work without explicit coordination or communication, but nevertheless cooperate to achieve tasks that will be useful in building a manned lunar base. In particular the authors believe such tasks as digging out trenches in which the habitation units will be placed, stockpiling a supply of loose lunar soil to cover the habitation units, and actually covering them when delivered, can all be carried out by such small bulldozers
Keywords
aerospace control; building; mobile robots; aerospace control; bulldozers; construction robots; lunar base; mobile robots; totally autonomous robots; Artificial intelligence; Contracts; Costs; Earth; Intelligent robots; Moon; Organisms; Robot kinematics; Soil; Sun;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligent Robots and Systems '90. 'Towards a New Frontier of Applications', Proceedings. IROS '90. IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location
Ibaraki
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IROS.1990.262415
Filename
262415
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