Exploring planet geology through force-feedback telemanipulation from orbit

Author:

Panzirsch Michael1ORCID,Pereira Aaron12,Singh Harsimran1ORCID,Weber Bernhard1,Ferreira Edmundo2,Gherghescu Andrei2ORCID,Hann Lukas2,den Exter Emiel2,van der Hulst Frank23ORCID,Gerdes Levin24ORCID,Cencetti Leonardo25ORCID,Wormnes Kjetil2,Grenouilleau Jessica2ORCID,Carey William2ORCID,Balachandran Ribin1,Hulin Thomas1ORCID,Ott Christian1ORCID,Leidner Daniel1ORCID,Albu-Schäffer Alin1ORCID,Lii Neal Y.1ORCID,Krüger Thomas2

Affiliation:

1. German Aerospace Center (DLR), Robotics and Mechatronics Center, Wessling, Germany.

2. European Space Agency (ESA), Noordwijk, Netherlands.

3. MF Robotics, Leiden, Netherlands.

4. Department of Systems Engineering and Automation, University of Málaga, Málaga, Spain.

5. École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.

Abstract

Current space exploration roadmaps envision exploring the surface geology of celestial bodies with robots for both scientific research and in situ resource utilization. In such unstructured, poorly lit, complex, and remote environments, automation is not always possible, and some tasks, such as geological sampling, require direct teleoperation aided by force-feedback (FF). The operator would be on an orbiting spacecraft, and poor bandwidth, high latency, and packet loss from orbit to ground mean that safe, stable, and transparent interaction is a substantial technical challenge. For this scenario, a control method was developed that ensures stability at high delay without reduction in speed or loss of positioning accuracy. At the same time, a new level of safety is achieved not only through FF itself but also through an intrinsic property of the approach preventing hard impacts. On the basis of this method, a tele-exploration scenario was simulated in the Analog-1 experiment with an astronaut on the International Space Station (ISS) using a 6–degree-of-freedom (DoF) FF capable haptic input device to control a mobile robot with manipulator on Earth to collect rock samples. The 6-DoF FF telemanipulation from space was performed at a round-trip communication delay constantly between 770 and 850 milliseconds and an average packet loss of 1.27%. This experiment showcases the feasibility of a complete space exploration scenario via haptic telemanipulation under spaceflight conditions. The results underline the benefits of this control method for safe and accurate interactions and of haptic feedback in general.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Control and Optimization,Computer Science Applications,Mechanical Engineering

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