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Super Ball Bot - Structures for Planetary Landing and Exploration, NIAC Phase 2 Final ReportSmall, light-weight and low-cost missions will become increasingly important to NASA's exploration goals. Ideally teams of small, collapsible, light weight robots, will be conveniently packed during launch and would reliably separate and unpack at their destination. Such robots will allow rapid, reliable in-situ exploration of hazardous destination such as Titan, where imprecise terrain knowledge and unstable precipitation cycles make single-robot exploration problematic. Unfortunately landing lightweight conventional robots is difficult with current technology. Current robot designs are delicate, requiring a complex combination of devices such as parachutes, retrorockets and impact balloons to minimize impact forces and to place a robot in a proper orientation. Instead we are developing a radically different robot based on a "tensegrity" structure and built purely with tensile and compression elements. Such robots can be both a landing and a mobility platform allowing for dramatically simpler mission profile and reduced costs. These multi-purpose robots can be light-weight, compactly stored and deployed, absorb strong impacts, are redundant against single-point failures, can recover from different landing orientations and can provide surface mobility. These properties allow for unique mission profiles that can be carried out with low cost and high reliability and which minimizes the inefficient dependance on "use once and discard" mass associated with traditional landing systems. We believe tensegrity robot technology can play a critical role in future planetary exploration.
Document ID
20160000577
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Other
Authors
SunSpiral, Vytas
(SGT, Inc. Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Agogino, Adrian
(California Univ. Santa Cruz, CA, United States)
Atkinson, David
(Idaho Univ. Boise, ID, United States)
Date Acquired
January 11, 2016
Publication Date
September 1, 2015
Subject Category
Cybernetics, Artificial Intelligence And Robotics
Mechanical Engineering
Systems Analysis And Operations Research
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN27344
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNA14AA60C
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS2-03144
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Tensegrity
Robotics
Controls
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