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Fault Prediction in Planetary Drilling Using Subspace Analysis TechniquesIn remote planetary environments, robotic agents must respond to or reason through faults before they escalate to mission-critical failures. No broadly applicable solution exists to give a specialized agent like The Regolith and Ice Drill for Exploring New Terrain (TRIDENT) situational awareness for when a situation may escalate to a drilling fault. We propose a new online time-series subspace analysis method, Entangled Singular Spectrum Transformation (ESST), to better predict and analyze faults using online data produced by the TRIDENT drill. We evaluate performance against other online subspace analysis techniques to determine the optimal detection method for sudden drilling faults.
Document ID
20250002705
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Sarah Boelter ORCID
(University of Minnesota Minneapolis, United States)
Lucas Weber
(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg Erlangen, Germany)
Richard Lenz
(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg Erlangen, Germany)
Brian Glass ORCID
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, United States)
Maria Gini
(University of Minnesota Minneapolis, United States)
Date Acquired
March 14, 2025
Subject Category
Cybernetics, Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
Meeting Information
Meeting: International Conference on Intelligent Autonomous Systems (IAS-19)
Location: Genoa
Country: IT
Start Date: June 30, 2025
End Date: July 4, 2025
Sponsors: Intelligent Autonomous Systems (IAS) Society
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 2240197
WBS: 811073
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
subspace analysis
planetary drilling
TRIDENT drill
singular spectrum analysis
fault detection
time series
robotic agents
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