Friday, September 20, 2024

Europe’s Mars ‘fetch rover’ nails sample pick-up test in the field (video)

AstronomyEurope's Mars 'fetch rover' nails sample pick-up test in the field (video)


European aerospace giant Airbus has taken two of its Mars rovers out for field tests in a quarry near London, showcasing for the first time a new robotic arm for autonomous sample collection on alien planets. The company also experimented with a model of its ExoMars rover, hoping to improve its navigation system to enable the robot to travel faster and explore more terrain once it reaches the Red Planet in 2028. 

During the tests, the Mars Sample Fetch Rover demonstrator model named Codi received coordinates from a simulated ground control station to direct it to where simulated Mars samples had been stashed. The rover then used its onboard maps and an autonomous navigation system that includes a pair of stereo cameras to find its way to the samples. 

Airbus has already tested the rover twice in the same quarry in recent years, but this year’s test campaign was the first to demonstrate not only travel but also sample collection. That, too, had to be done completely autonomously.

Rover trials in a quarry in the UK showing a four-wheeled rover, known as Codi, using its robotic arm and a powerful computer vision system to pick up sample tubes.  (Image credit: Airbus)

The rover moves at a leisurely speed of about 2.75 inches per second (7 centimeters per second), while also making frequent stops to evaluate the surrounding terrain with its stereo cameras and decide on the safest and most efficient route. During the tests, the rover was able to cover relatively large distances without any human intervention. “We hit a record of 300 meters [980 feet] that the rover managed to do in a day, all on its own, no interruptions,” Chris Draper, Exploration Rover Program Manager at Airbus told Space.com.

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