NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
A Study Demonstrating that Using Gravitational Offset to Prepare Extraterrestrial Mobility Missions is MisleadingRecently, there has been a surge of international interest in extraterrestrial exploration targeting the Moon, Mars, the moons of Mars, and various asteroids. This contribution discusses how current state-of-the-art Earth-based testing for designing rovers and landers for these missions currently leads to overly optimistic conclusions about the behavior of these devices upon deployment on the targeted celestial bodies. The key misconception is that gravitational offset is necessary during the terramechanics testing of rover and lander prototypes on Earth. The body of evidence supporting our argument is tied to a small number of studies conducted during parabolic flights and insights derived from newly revised scaling laws. We argue that what has prevented the community from fully diagnosing the problem at hand is the absence of effective physics-based models capable of simulating terramechanics under low gravity conditions. We developed such a physics-based simulator and utilized it to gauge the mobility of early prototypes of the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER). This contribution discusses the results generated by this simulator, how they correlate with physical test results from the NASA Glenn SLOPE lab, and the fallacy of the gravitational offset in rover and lander testing. The simulator, which is open-source and publicly available, also supports studies for in situ resource utilization activities, e.g., digging, bulldozing, and berming, in low gravity environments.
Document ID
20250001809
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
Wei Hu
(Shanghai Jiao Tong University Shanghai, China)
Pei Li
(University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison, United States)
Arno Rogg
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, United States)
Alexander Schepelmann
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Samuel Chandler
(ProtoInnovations, LLC Pittsburgh, United States)
Ken Kamrin
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, United States)
Dan Negrut
(University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison, United States)
Date Acquired
February 18, 2025
Publication Date
March 31, 2025
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of Field Robotics
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (United States)
ISSN: 1556-4959
e-ISSN: 1556-4967
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing and Performance
Ground Support Systems and Facilities (Space)
Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 993436.06.02.02.05
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC20C0252
CONTRACT_GRANT: OAC2209791
CONTRACT_GRANT: W911NF1910431
CONTRACT_GRANT: W911NF1810476
CONTRACT_GRANT: 12302050
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
VIPER
rover mobility
rover simulation
granular scaling law
terramechanics
continuous representation model
smoothed particle hydrodynamics
No Preview Available