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Super Ball Bot - Structures for Planetary Landing and ExplorationSmall, light-weight and low-cost missions will become increasingly important to NASA's exploration goals for our solar system. Ideally teams of dozens or even hundreds of small, collapsable robots, weighing only a few kilograms a piece, will be conveniently packed during launch and would reliably separate and unpack at their destination. Such teams 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 many lightweight conventional robots is difficult with conventional technology. Current robot designs are delicate, requiring combinations of devices such as parachutes, retrorockets and impact balloons to minimize impact forces and to place a robot in a proper orientation. Instead we propose to develop a radically different robot based on a "tensegrity" built purely upon tensile and compression elements. These robots can be light-weight, absorb strong impacts, are redundant against single-point failures, can recover from different landing orientations and are easy to collapse and uncollapse. We believe tensegrity robot technology can play a critical role in future planetary exploration.
Document ID
20190001164
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other
Authors
Agogino, Adrian K.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA, United States)
SunSpiral, Vytas
(Zymergen, Inc)
Atkinson, David
Date Acquired
March 4, 2019
Publication Date
November 12, 2018
Subject Category
Cybernetics, Artificial Intelligence And Robotics
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
HQ-E-DAA-TN63111
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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