DocumentCode :
700279
Title :
How to plug-in your rover into a space mission to moon or mars
Author :
Sarkarati, Mehran ; Merri, Mario ; Nergaard, Kim ; Steele, Paul
Author_Institution :
Eur. Space Agency (ESA), Darmstadt, Germany
fYear :
2015
fDate :
17-19 Feb. 2015
Firstpage :
318
Lastpage :
324
Abstract :
The European Space Agency, ESA, has been working on specifying a set of standardised Telerobotics service interfaces in the context of the METERON project. These Services facilitate integration of new robotic agents into the generic infrastructure of future human-robotic space missions. The METERON Robotic Services have been successfully used for the first time as part of the METERON OPSCOM-2 experiment, during which an ESA astronaut monitored and controlled from the International Space Station (ISS) a car-size rover on the ground via the Delay Tolerant Network (DTN), while the same service interfaces were used on the ground via a different communication protocol to perform distributed monitoring of the activities. At multi-agency level, the Telerobotics working group of the Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) has similar objective of specifying a set of generalised service interfaces, which shall allow interoperability of robotic agents. The specified METERON Robotic Services constitute an input to this standardisation effort. Our paper elaborates on the concept behind abstracting from the proprietary interfaces of diverse robotic agents and explains the adopted approach for the implementation of the fist set of METERON Robotic Services in a communication and technology independent manner.
Keywords :
control engineering computing; delay tolerant networks; human-robot interaction; open systems; planetary rovers; protocols; telerobotics; CCSDS; Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems; DTN; ESA astronaut; European Space Agency; ISS; International Space Station; METERON OPSCOM-2 experiment; METERON robotic services; car-size rover; communication protocol; delay tolerant network; distributed monitoring; generic infrastructure; human-robotic space mission; interoperability; multiagency level; proprietary interface; robotic agent; standardised METERON telerobotics services; standardised telerobotics service interfaces; Europe; Monitoring; Robot kinematics; Space missions; Space vehicles; Telerobotics; CCSDS MO Services; CCSDS Telerobotics Services; European Space Agency; METERON;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Automation, Robotics and Applications (ICARA), 2015 6th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Queenstown
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICARA.2015.7081167
Filename :
7081167
Link To Document :
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