Bronze level automatically awarded US beta

This data has achieved Bronze level on 22 October 2015 which means this data makes a great start at the basics of publishing open data.

Human Robotic Systems (HRS): Extreme Terrain Mobility Element

Summary

Type of release
a one-off release of a single dataset

Data Licence
Not Applicable

Content Licence
Creative Commons CCZero

Verification
automatically awarded

Release Date
9 April 2015
Modified Date
8 July 2015
Publishers
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Keywords
active, element, johnson-space-center
Identifier
human-robotic-systems-hrs-extreme-terrain-mobility-element
Landing Page
http://techport.nasa.gov/view/13677
Maintainers
Stephen Gaddis stephen.w.gaddis@nasa.gov
Language
en-US

Community verification

Other people can verify whether the answers on this certificate are correct.

This certificate is automatically awarded.

Sign in to verify or report this certificate


Description

<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.  Offshoots of the technology involved lightweight exercise devices for ISS and strength measurement by using the torque sensing in the X1’s joints.  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. </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.  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.  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.  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 "inverted Stewart platform", 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 “mother-daughter” approach to exploring craters using tethered robots.  The small robots will be tethered to the larger robot with winches on both ends so that the “mother” can recover the “daughter” even in the event of failure of the small robot.  In normal operation, the daughter robot will pay out the tether to move further away, and spool it back in to return.  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.  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 communications, and localizing without infrastructure.</p><p>In FY14, the team will build on its past Advanced Navigation work, leveraging and extending the development and testing performed previously.  The proof-of-concept algorithms developed during FY13 will be improved, streamlined, and integrated into the rover software stack to run onboard and in real time.  The resulting system will be tested in a live onboard test of the system in a realistic setting.</p>


General Information


Legal Information

This dataset has been created by US Government which means it is required to be in the public domain. However US copyright law only allows open access by US citizens, we have assumed the data is equivalently licensed as CC0 for the rest of the world as this is in the spirit of the US Government’s Open Data policy.
  • The rights statement is at

    http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/human-robotic-systems-hrs-extreme-terrain-mobility-element Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • Outside the US, this data is available under

    Creative Commons CCZero Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • There are

    yes, and the rights are all held by the same person or organisation Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The content is available under

    Creative Commons CCZero Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The rights statement includes data about

    its data licence Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • This data contains

    no data about individuals Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know


Practical Information

  • The data appears in this collection

    http://catalog.data.gov/organization/nasa-gov Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The accuracy or relevance of this data will

    go out of date but it is timestamped Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The data is

    backed up offsite Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know


Technical Information

  • This data is published at

    http://techport.nasa.gov/xml-api/13677 Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • This data is

    machine-readable Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The format of this data is

    a standard open format Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know


Social Information

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    title Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    description Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    identifier Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    landing page Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    publisher Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    keyword(s) or tag(s) Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    distribution(s) Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    release date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    modification date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    temporal coverage Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation includes machine-readable data for

    language Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation about each distribution includes machine-readable data for

    release date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation about each distribution includes machine-readable data for

    a URL to access the data Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation about each distribution includes machine-readable data for

    a URL to download the dataset Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • The documentation about each distribution includes machine-readable data for

    type of download media Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • Find out how to contact someone about this data at

    http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/human-robotic-systems-hrs-extreme-terrain-mobility-element Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know

  • Find out how to suggest improvements to publication at

    http://www.data.gov/issue/?media_url=http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/human-robotic-systems-hrs-extreme-terrain-mobility-element Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know