OPALS lasercomm instrument is unpacked from the Dragon spacecraft by a robotic arm.

 

 

Transmitido en directo el 01/05/2014

Watch live from the International Space Station as JPL’s OPALS lasercomm instrument is unpacked from the Dragon spacecraft by a robotic arm.

OPALS, the Optical Payload for Lasercomm Science, is a technology demonstration that will beam HD video from space to Earth via laser light.

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OPALS will demonstrate optical communication by transferring a video from our payload on the International Space Station (ISS) to our ground receiver at JPL’s Optical Communications Telescope Laboratory (OCTL) in Wrightwood, California. As the ISS travels across the sky, a laser beacon will be transmitted from the ground telescope to our payload and tracked. While maintaining lock on the uplink beacon using a closed loop control system and a two-axis gimbal, the OPALS flight system will downlink a modulated laser beam with a formatted video. Each demonstration lasts for approximately 100 seconds as the ISS payload and ground telescope maintain line of sight.

For more info on OPALS, visithttp://phaeton.jpl.nasa.gov/external/…

 

Source: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Space station cargo craft completes test of automated rendezvous system

 

Publicado el 25/04/2014

An unpiloted Russian Progress cargo ship re-docked the International Space Station’s Zvezda Service Module after completing a two-day test of an upgraded automated rendezvous system on the Progress. The Kurs rendezvous hardware will be incorporated into Progress cargo vehicles currently under development.

Source: NASA

A Step Up for NASA’s Robonaut: Ready for Climbing Legs

Getting your “space legs” in Earth orbit has taken on new meaning for NASA’s pioneering Robonaut program.

 Thanks to a successful launch of the SpaceX-3 flight of the Falcon 9/Dragon capsule on Friday, April 18, the lower limbs for Robonaut 2 (R2) are aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Safely tucked inside the Dragon resupply vehicle, R2’s legs are to be attached by a station crew member to Robonaut’s torso already on the orbiting outpost.

R2’s upper body arrived on the space station back in February 2011 during the last flight of the space shuttle Discovery. That event signaled the first human-like robot to arrive in space to become a permanent resident of the laboratory.

Jointly developed by NASA’s Human Exploration and Operations and Space Technology mission directorates in cooperation with with General Motors, R2 showcases how a robotic assistant can work alongside humans, whether tasks are done in space or on Earth in a manufacturing facility.

“NASA has explored with robots for more than a decade, from the stalwart rovers on Mars to R2 on the station,” observes Michael Gazarik, the associate administrator for NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD). “Our investment in robotic technology development is helping us to bolster productivity by applying robotics technology and devices to fortify and enhance individual human capabilities, performance and safety in space.”

Some assembly required

The R2 now consists of a head and a torso with two arms and two hands. With the addition of the newly developed climbing legs, the robot can augment its chief role: to help astronauts by taking over some of their duties on the space station.

But before R2 is up and running with its new limbs, there’s some assembly required.

“We’ve got a number of upgrades we’re doing,” says Ron Diftler, Robonaut Project Manager within the Robotic Systems Technology Branch at the NASA Johnson Space Center. “In sending up the legs, we also have to change things inside R2’s body.”

That includes new computers, new wiring, mechanical assembly, and interfacing the legs to R2’s main processor. “We have it all mapped out,” Diftler explains.

In practice runs at NASA Johnson Space Center, reconfiguring R2 to adopt its legs has taken about 14 hours, spread out over several steps in time. “We see about 20 hours of ISS crew time to do the task, following detailed procedures and done over at least a month,” Diftler adds.

Going mobile

For the Robonaut team, outfitting the torso with legs is a major milestone.

“We’ll go from being the first humanoid robot in space to being the first mobile humanoid robot in space,” Diftler proudly points out. “Being mobile significantly adds to our capability.”

Right now, the R2’s torso, head and arms are secured to a stationary base, so crew members take tasks to the robot.

But getting a literal leg-up on mobility extends the jobs R2 can perform.

“We call them the 3 D’s…the dull, dangerous, and dirty,” Diftler notes, those functions that free-up astronaut time to safely complete more vital work. “That’s what robots are for. The astronauts are highly capable individuals that should not have to do all the tasks that require a human-like hand. The whole idea is that we want to reduce the burden on the crew in all situations,” he explains.

Inside job

Think of it as one small step for robotkind.

That is, R2’s legs will allow it to slowly saunter around the space station. Making use of toe-like fixtures—called “end effectors” that take the place of feet—R2 can use sockets and handrails to move about. With legs, the robot can lend a hand, or two, to the crew while secured to the station by at least one leg.

“The legs are very flexible. They can orient themselves in non-humanoid ways,” Diftler explains, with each leg having many joints to provide that suppleness. “It’s not the kind of symmetry that you have in a human,” he says, but we were not trying to run a beauty contest.”

Having R2 climb about inside the space station is an early test run of, eventually, having the automaton work outside the complex.

“Once we are able to go outside the station with an upgraded and more robust R2, then we can start going after some of the more mundane, perhaps dangerous jobs, and help the crew there too,” Diftler says.

Stepping stones

Advancing R2’s “to do” list both inside and outside the International Space Station are seen as stepping-stones.

“My goal and the goal of my division,” Diftler says, “is that wherever humans go, be it an asteroid, back to the Moon, or on to Mars, we want to send a Robonaut. We want to do so either before humans go to set things up, to go with them to help as they do their exploration…or to maintain a habitat when humans aren’t there.”

Using the space lab as a test bed for putting muscle behind maturing the NASA R2 system paints a pathway forward, beyond low Earth orbit.

Diftler says R2’s work at the ISS is more of a technology demonstration than experiment. The team’s confidence level in robot building and testing is high.

“We’re working out all of the issues so that future Robonauts can become ever more reliable,” Diftler concludes. “This is an absolutely exciting time for NASA and for our robotic work.”

For further information on Robonaut, go to:

http://robonaut.jsc.nasa.gov/

Space station cargo craft undocks to test automated rendezvous system

Publicado el 23/04/2014

An unpiloted Russian Progress cargo ship left the International Space Station for a two-day test on an upgraded automated rendezvous system. After undocking from the aft port of the Zvezda Service Module April 23, the craft will travel more than 300 miles from the orbital complex. On its return to the station, the Progress will test its Kurs rendezvous hardware, which will be incorporated into Progress cargo vehicles currently under development. The Progress is scheduled to redock to Zvezda on April 25.

Source: NASA

Space station Robonaut getting its legs

Robonaut , legs attached, at a Houston lab. Most of the robot is at the International Space Station; the legs are on the SpaceX supply ship that launched Friday. NASA

CAPECANAVERAL, Fla. -Robonaut, the first out-of-this-world humanoid, is finally getting its space legs.For three years, Robonaut has had to manage from the waist up. This new pair of legs means the experimental robot – now stuck on a pedestal – is going mobile at the International Space Station.

“Legs are going to really kind of open up the robot’s horizons,” said Robert Ambrose from NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

It’s the next big step in NASA’s quest to develop robotic helpers for astronauts. With legs, the eight-foot Robonaut will be able to climb throughout the 260-mile-high outpost, performing mundane cleaning chores and fetching things for the human crew.

The robot’s gangly, contortionist-bending legs are packed aboard a SpaceX supply ship that launched, more than a month late. It was the private company’s fourth shipment to the space station for NASA and is due to arrive Sunday morning.

Robonaut 2 – R2 for short – has been counting down the days.

“Legs are on the way!” read a message Friday on its Twitter account, @AstroRobonaut. (OK, so it’s actually a Johnson Space Center spokesman doing the tweeting.)

Space Exploration Technologies Corp.’s unmanned capsule, Dragon, holds about two tons of space station supplies and experiments, Robonaut’s legs included.

Until a battery backpack arrives on another supply ship later this year, the multimillion-dollar robot will need a power extension cord to stretch its legs, limiting its testing area to the U.S. side of the space station. Testing should start in a few months.

Each leg – 4 feet, 8 inches long – has seven joints. Instead of feet, there are grippers, each with a light, camera, and sensor for building 3-D maps. “Imagine monkey feet with eyes in the palm of each foot,” Ambrose said.

NASA engineers based the design on the tether attachments used by spacewalking astronauts. The legs cost $6 million to develop and $8 million more to build and certify for flight. The torso with head and arms delivered by space shuttle Discovery in 2011 on its final flight cost $2.5 million, not counting the untold millions of dollars spent on development and testing.

Ambrose acknowledges the legs are “a little creepy” when they move because of the number of joints and the range of motion. “I hope my knee never bends that many degrees, but Robonaut has no problems at all,” said Ambrose, chief of software, robotics and simulation division, at Johnson.

The grippers will latch onto handrails inside the space station, keeping Robonaut’s hands free for working and carrying things. Expect slow going: just inches a second. If Robonaut bumps into something, it will pause. A good shove will shut it down. “The robot’s not going to have as much fun as the astronauts,” Ambrose said. “No jumping, no somersaults, no flying.”

Robonaut already has demonstrated it can measure the flow on air filters, “a really crummy job for humans,” Ambrose said. Once mobile, it can take over that job around the station.

How about cleaning the space station toilets? “I have a feeling that’s in Robonaut’s future,” Ambrose said.

This robot will stay indoors as it learns how to climb. The next-generation model, now in development and targeted for a 2017 launch, will venture outside on spacewalks. That’s where the real payoff lies.

A robot doesn’t need oxygen tanks and fancy spacesuits. A robot never tires or gets bored. Why, a robot could stay out in the vacuum of space for days, weeks, or even months, clinging to the station. Human spacewalkers are limited to eight or nine hours.


Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/nation_world/20140420_Space_station_robot_getting_its_legs.html#pwtkLpLa5iQMsZMw.99

Smartphone attached to flying robots set to assist astronauts on ISS

nasasphera

Two months after Google announced Project Tango, which is an experimental Android-powered smartphone with 3D sensors, its Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) team is working to get a prototype inside the International Space Station to assist NASA astronauts.

 

The 5-inch smartphone, which comes with 3D-tracking and mapping capabilities via its camera, will be attached to a robot (on a robotic platform called NASA Spheres) with the ability to navigate the station, Mashable reported.

The Spheres robots will work in zero-gravity and help those on board the International Space Station.

The team has been working with NASA Ames Researchers for more than a year now to get its Project Tango smartphone concept into robots that work in space.

The Spheres program aims to develop zero-gravity autonomous platforms that could act as robotic assistants for astronauts or perform maintenance activities independently on station.

 

The 3D-tracking and mapping capabilities of Project Tango would allow Spheres to reconstruct a 3D-map of the space station and, for the first time in history, enable autonomous navigation of a floating robotic platform 230 miles above the surface of the earth.

Project Tango and NASA recently tested the concept during a zero-gravity flight that left from Texas, but the technology will launch into orbit starting this summer, according to Google.

Source: Malaysia Sun

 

Astronauts to Test ‘Touchy-Feely’ Wearable Robot Joystick in Space

Body-mounted astronaut joystick for the Haptics-1 experiment, developed by ESA’s Telerobotics and Haptics Laboratory as part of the multi-agency Meteron (Multi-Purpose End-to-End Robotic Operation Network) initiative, investigating telerobotics for space. The Haptics-1 experiment is being flown to the ISS by ATV-5 in summer 2014. Credit: ESA

This summer, astronauts on the International Space Station will test an innovative wearable joystick that may someday allow humans to remotely control robots on other worlds.

The European Space Agency will launch a super-sensitive joystick, which agency officials described as “touchy-feely” in a project overview, to the space station to help engineers learn better ways to telerobotically operate a robot on a planet’s surface. The astronauts will use the joystick and fill out questionnaires on its performance as part of a study on human motor control in long-term weightlessness.

“Future planetary exploration may well see robots on an alien surface being teleoperated by humans in orbit above them — close enough for real-time remote control, without any significant signal lag, to benefit from human resourcefulness without the expense and danger of a manned landing,” ESA officials explained in a written. [Photos: Astronaut Drives Earth Robot from Space]

Because the laws of physics dictate that every action has an equal and opposite reaction, the joystick apparatus must be attached to a body harness, which in turn is bolted to the inside of the station. If the joystick wasn’t secured, moving it would cause the floating astronaut to careen around the room.

Like many video games, the joystick will both resist the astronaut’s motions and create forces of its own, simulating the feeling of encountering objects on a moon or planet’s surface. By conducting a series of tests, astronauts will help scientists understand how touch feedback feels in microgravity, and what happens to a person’s motor control after prolonged periods of weightlessness.

Getting the hardware to be extremely precise yet incredibly sturdy was the project’s main challenge,” André Schiele, head of ESA’s Telerobotics and Haptics Laboratory, overseeing the experiment, said in a statement. “The resulting system can produce minute forces most people are not sensitive enough to feel, but astronauts could kick it and it will still work and respond correctly.”

This experiment will be the first time hardware will be put into orbit from METERON (short for Multi-Purpose End-To-End Robotic Operations Network), a project operated by several countries, including the Netherlands, Germany, the United States, and Russia. METERON researches ways in which astronauts can teleoperate robotic craft from outer space.

The joystick will be flown to the station aboard an unmanned Automated Transfer Vehicle, craft that the ESA uses to transport supplies, fuel, and experiments to the space station.

Follow Raphael Rosen @raphaelrosen22Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.