SpaceRef - Space News as it Happens · About Us · Advertising · Contact Us · Comments Saturday, November 21, 2009    
 

Advertisement
SpaceRef - Your Space Reference
Home | More News - Upcoming Events - Space Station - Get our Daily Newsletter | RSS/XML News Feeds Available

Buy a - SpaceRef Mug - Arthur Clarke Mars Greenhouse Mug - SpaceRef T-Shirt - NASA STS-128 Store
Carnegie Mellon To Demonstrate Autonomous Robot That Will Seek Life in Chile's Atacama Desert

 
PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Tuesday, August 10, 2004
Source: Carnegie Mellon University

image

PITTSBURGH-Carnegie Mellon University robotics and life sciences researchers will demonstrate Zoe, an autonomous rover being groomed to seek and identify life in hostile environments, at 10 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 12, at the former LTV site off Brownfield Road in Pittsburgh. (See below for directions.)

The researchers, who are part of a team that includes scientists from NASA's Ames Research Center (Mountain View, Calif.), the University of Tennessee and Universidad Catolica del Norte (Antofagasta, Chile), will soon be accompanying Zoe to the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, where it will perform experiments focused on seeking and identifying forms of life. The team will spend nearly two months in the Atacama, described as the most arid region on earth, working on the second phase of a three-year program whose results may ultimately enable robots to look for life on Mars.

The project is part of NASA's Astrobiology Science and Technology Program for Exploring Planets, or ASTEP, which concentrates on pushing the limits of technology in harsh environments. The first phase of the project began in 2003 when a solar-powered robot named Hyperion, also developed at Carnegie Mellon, was taken to the Atacama as a research test bed. Scientists conducted experiments with Hyperion to determine the optimum design, software and instrumentation for a robot that would be used in more extensive experiments conducted this fall and in 2005. Zoe is the result of that work.

In the final year of the project, plans call for Zoe, equipped with a full array of instruments, to operate autonomously as it travels 50 kilometers over a two-month period. David Wettergreen, associate research professor in Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute and project leader for Life in the Atacama, will be in the desert with his colleagues from the end of August to mid-October conducting experiments in rover perception, mobility and autonomy during long-distance traverses.

The Atacama team also will conduct a series of robotic science investigations in which Zoe will be sent to visit promising locations and deploy instruments able to identify life forms. During these investigations, the rover's activities will be guided remotely from an operations center in Pittsburgh.

This year's Atacama mission will include an effort to document the life-detection capabilities of people in contrast with those of robots. A fluorescence imager developed by Alan Waggoner, director of the Molecular Biosensor and Imaging Center (MBIC) in the university's Mellon College of Science, will be located beneath the rover and used to detect the presence of molecules indicative of life.

"Our goal is to make genuine discoveries about the limits of life on Earth and to create technology that can be applied to future NASA missions," said Wettergreen. "This will be the second of three field experiments in the Atacama. Each time our robot is better able to use sensing and intelligence to find land forms or environmental conditions that could harbor life."

"Ultimately, we want to create an astrobiologist without a space suit," said Nathalie Cabrol, a planetary scientist at NASA Ames and the SETI Institute, who will lead the science team for the Atacama investigation.

The Life in the Atacama project is funded with a $3 million, three-year grant from NASA to Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute in the School of Computer Science. William "Red" Whittaker is the principal investigator. Researchers from the Robotics Institute are collaborating with scientists in the MBIC, which has a separate $900,000 grant from NASA to develop fluorescent dyes and automated microscopes that the robot will use to locate various forms of life. A solar-powered, autonomous rover like its predecessor Hyperion, Zoe is expected to travel 2 kilometers each solar day, with a maximum speed of 100 centimeters per second. By contrast, the current Mars rovers travel 0.007 kilometers in one solar day, with a maximum speed of 5 centimeters per second. Zoe can also maneuver itself around large obstacles and survive a 30-degree incline.

Zoe will be guided by a science team using EventScope, a remote experience browser developed by researchers at the Studio for Creative Inquiry in Carnegie Mellon's College of Fine Arts. It enables scientists and the public to experience the Atacama environment through the eyes and various sensors of the rover. A science operations control room at the Remote Experience and Learning Lab in Pittsburgh will be active in September and October while Zoe is in the field. Scientists from NASA, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the University of Tennessee, the British Antarctic Survey and the European Space Agency will participate.

For more information, images and field reports beginning September 1 from the Atacama visit: www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/atacama

For more information on the Molecular Biosensor and Imaging Center and the fluorescent dyes being developed there, see: www.cmu.edu/PR/releases03/030210_mars.html

To reach the LTV demonstration site, travel East on Second Avenue. Continue straight ahead past Greenfield Avenue at the railroad underpass. Pass through an open gate, over a railroad crossing, to a second gate at the LTV site entrance. Enter the site and follow orange traffic cones to the demonstration site.


Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • Fark
  • Google
  • Live
  • YahooMyWeb

Mercury - Venus - The Moon - Mars - Jupiter - Saturn - Pluto

RADWIN empowers service providers so they can deliver high speed Wireless broadband Access services.

Find hose reels and watering systems

Quality leather chairs in a variety of styles.


 


News from Commercial Space Watch

- Recovery Act: Water Management in California: Cyber Infrastructure for Irrigation Optimization

- Former Shuttle Astronaut-Astronomer, Sam Durrance, Joins the CSF Suborbital Researchers Group

- Satellite-Based Earth Observation Market Entering Phase of Impressive Growth

- NASA and Lighting Science Sign Agreement to Develop Lighting for Space Exploration

- Sky No Longer the Limit for Digital Magazines

- NASA Develops Algae Bioreactor as a Sustainable Energy Source

- Aerojet Engines Support Space Shuttle Atlantis' Re-stocking Mission to International Space Station

- Suborbital Applications Researchers Group Meets in Washington

- NewSpace Is Under Attack

- Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne Successfully Tests Thruster for Unmanned Lunar Lander

- bacus Technology Corporation Awarded NASA Kennedy Space Center Small Business Prime Contractor of the Year - 2009

- NASA ARC Memo; Procurement Sensitivity of the Competition of Aeronautics and Exploration Mission Modeling and Simulation Request for Proposal NNA09274979R

- Lockheed Martin Tests Carbon Nanotube-Based Memory Devices on NASA Shuttle Mission

- Leonid Meteor Shower to Perform Late Tonight

- Sri Lanka signs agreement with SSTL for space capability

- Decorate your home with nautical decor

- Dieses Portal stellt Ihnen die besten online Casino Bonus und Pokerräume im Internet vor.

- Play free bingo games and black out bingo.

- 220Marketing specializes in providing mortgage marketing for mortgage companies and managers.

- Take your time to tour our site and check out all the fun games we operate. In addition to the 20 online bingo rooms we operate, we also have online keno.

- TV Stands


advertisment

Learning About Telescopes

Learn about Telescopes

Recent Press Releases

Former Shuttle Astronaut-Astronomer, Sam Durrance, Joins the CSF Suborbital Researchers Group

Nanotech in Space: Rensselaer Experiment To Weather the Trials of Orbit

ESO: Ticking Stellar Time Bomb Identified

China Joins Thirty Meter Telescope Project

Satellite-Based Earth Observation Market Entering Phase of Impressive Growth

Porters Tahoe is the premier online dealer for Skis and Burton Snowboards, visit PortersTahoe.com!

Tax Free Cigarettes

Looking for TV Trays. Find a wide selection

Bingo world tour - The most comprehensive guide to Play Online Bingo Games

Find a number of writing desks for sale

the best online casinos guide on the internet offering higher payouts than any land based casino.

Paradise Style Group - wedding and special occasion dresses.

Design and Sell Merchandise Online for Free


Copyright © 1999-2009 SpaceRef Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy