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This is a Non-Federal dataset covered by different Terms of Use than Data.gov.

Human Robotic Systems (HRS): Extreme Terrain Mobility Element

Metadata Updated: February 21, 2025

<p>During 2014, the <em>Extreme Terrain Mobility </em>project element is developing five technologies:</p><ul><li>Exoskeleton Development for ISS Evaluation</li><li>Extreme Terrain Mobility Testbed</li><li>Low Gravity Testbed using Tethered Stewart Platform</li><li>Prototype Crater Access Robot</li><li>Advanced Mobility Navigation Software</li></ul><p><strong>Exoskeleton Development for ISS Evaluation</strong></p><p>During FY12, HRS and GCD developed the X1 exoskeleton with the ultimate intent of augmenting crew endurance/strength in future missions.&nbsp; Offshoots of the technology involved lightweight exercise devices for ISS and strength measurement by using the torque sensing in the X1&rsquo;s joints.&nbsp; The objective for exoskeleton development in FY14 is to build prototype exoskeleton ankles and deliver them to the JSC space and life sciences organization for evaluation as exercise devices and to design a single-joint knee dynamometer, based on X1 technologies, capable of measuring crew strength.&nbsp;</p><p><strong>Extreme Terrain Mobility Testbed</strong></p><p>The objective of FY14 work is to present mature systems that are ready to be carried forward by a Science Mission Directorate Principal Investigator (PI) willing to propose a system with greater mobility than exists on current Mars rovers.&nbsp; HRS has recently identified a potential national need with the National Science Foundation (NSF) that requires no-emission vehicles, such as NASA rovers, on the Arctic, Antarctic, Alaska and polar coastal areas.&nbsp; We have an opportunity to deploy NASA Space Technologies to these areas. Minimal success requires disseminating results to potential SMD PIs and potential partners within the NSF polar program.&nbsp; Early in fiscal year 2014, the HRS extreme terrain mobility group will prepare an Analysis of Alternatives study of a 170 kg rover for the Advance Exploration System (AES) Resource Prospector (RP).</p><p><strong>Low Gravity Testbed using Tethered Stewart Platform</strong></p><p>This task creates a 6-DOF testbed for evaluating microgravity and low-gravity proximity and contact operations, e.g. in the vicinity of a Near Earth Asteroid (NEA). This is accomplished using an &quot;inverted Stewart platform&quot;, where the vehicle under test is suspended by six computer-controlled cable winches so that it can be maneuvered in all 6 Degrees-of-Freedom.</p><p><strong>Prototype Crater Access Robot</strong></p><p>This task will develop and demonstrate a &ldquo;mother-daughter&rdquo; approach to exploring craters using tethered robots.&nbsp; The small robots will be tethered to the larger robot with winches on both ends so that the &ldquo;mother&rdquo; can recover the &ldquo;daughter&rdquo; even in the event of failure of the small robot.&nbsp; In normal operation, the daughter robot will pay out the tether to move further away, and spool it back in to return.&nbsp; In FY13, this task demonstrated deployment of the daughter robot with an internal winch on a tether. The daughter robot is designed to move on steep slopes, up to vertical, to carry and point close-up instruments, and to collect samples.&nbsp; In FY14, this task will design and build a tether that provides power from the mother robot to the daughter robot and provides for communications between them.</p><p><strong>Advanced Mobility Navigation Software</strong></p><p>The Advanced Navigation Software task is developing approaches for dealing with the significant challenges of autonomous planetary surface navigation, including descent on rough and steep terrain, exploring lava tubes, navigating long distances without co

Access & Use Information

Public: This dataset is intended for public access and use. Non-Federal: This dataset is covered by different Terms of Use than Data.gov. License: No license information was provided.

Downloads & Resources

References

http://techport.nasa.gov/home
http://techport.nasa.gov/doc/home/TechPort_Advanced_Search.pdf
http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=6561
http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=3456
http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=3447
http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=6584
http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=6560
http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=3448

Dates

Metadata Created Date February 21, 2025
Metadata Updated Date February 21, 2025

Metadata Source

Harvested from nasa test json

Additional Metadata

Resource Type Dataset
Metadata Created Date February 21, 2025
Metadata Updated Date February 21, 2025
Publisher Space Technology Mission Directorate
Maintainer
Identifier TECHPORT_13677
Data First Published 2012-10-01
Data Last Modified 2025-02-19
Public Access Level public
Bureau Code 026:00
Metadata Context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
Schema Version https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
Catalog Describedby https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
Harvest Object Id 4af33d7b-eb70-4e34-a6c1-bde87a36bbe9
Harvest Source Id a73e0c30-4684-40ef-908e-d22e9e9e5f86
Harvest Source Title nasa test json
Homepage URL http://techport.nasa.gov/view/13677
Program Code 026:000
Related Documents http://techport.nasa.gov/home, http://techport.nasa.gov/doc/home/TechPort_Advanced_Search.pdf, http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=6561, http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=3456, http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=3447, http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=6584, http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=6560, http://techport.nasa.gov/fetchFile?objectId=3448
Source Datajson Identifier True
Source Hash 0115664e956215b4c0c3336eceddfd9d35ec65bc120ca438b3b2bd27ce9cc3b2
Source Schema Version 1.1
Temporal 2012-10-01T00:00:00Z/2014-09-01T00:00:00Z

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