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Robotics Space Science

Robonaut "B" Getting Ready for Space 19

mykepredko writes "CNN has more about Robonaut B, which is an updated version of the original Robonaut including mobility using a modified Segway or a 'Space Leg' which allows it to use handholds on the ISS. I was expecting to see that it was being primarily developed for Hubble, but it should also be very useful for the ISS, allowing astronauts to stay inside when construction resumes."
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Robonaut "B" Getting Ready for Space

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  • Boba Fett? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Fiz Ocelot ( 642698 ) <baelzharon&gmail,com> on Monday August 23, 2004 @08:57PM (#10052295)
    Looks like the engineers are big Boba Fett fans. Here [nasa.gov] and Here [nasa.gov]

    Also the vision system looks really cool with some pics and a quote:

    "Using a sophisticated measurement constraint system, which employs knowledge of human kinematics, the stereo vision system is now able to track the 3D location of a person's hands relative to their head location."

  • by ToshiroOC ( 805867 ) on Tuesday August 24, 2004 @01:14AM (#10053570)
    Earlier, when the astronauts were doing spacewalks with the Russian suits, the whole spacestation started wobbling and bucking around enough to activate the thrusters that keep it in orbit (though they had been disabled for fear that one would hit an astronaut). As it turned out, the Russian suits vent excess air with about 1N of force, enough to cause the station to ripple noticably over long spacewalks. Using a robot for construction will allow the astronauts to stay inside and avoid causing further wobble with the suits, not to mention reduce the risk involved in sending an astronaut outside (or for some construction projects, both astronauts, leaving the ISS unmanned inside).
    • This is quite common with spacecraft. When (oh wonderful, purely American-made and mother of all space stations, enough sarcasm) SkyLab was used, the crew reported problems especially when one of the astronauts moved or jumped around during the Apollo Space Telescope work which ruined the observations. Oh well, AST was a white elephant in any case. Go all the way there to observe what? Sun. Easiest thing to observe from ground...
  • Dextre for Hubble (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    The "Can a Robot Save Hubble?" [nytimes.com] NYT article seems to indicate Dextra is currently the leading candidate for the Hubble mission.

    One part of the mission I don't understand, however:

    When the repair mission is complete, the part of the service craft containing the old instruments and the robot would detach from Hubble and burn up in the atmosphere, leaving the new propulsion unit on the telescope to maintain it in its 275-mile-high orbit until ready to bring it down. [emphasis added]

    Why throw away the robot

    • My guess would be that there are no safe ways of leaving it with the telescope. I'm just guessing here, all I know about orbital mechanics I learned from watching "Planetes".

      I doubt it could be attached to the telescope, as that would add a significant off-center weight that the attitude control system might not be able to handle. And that's assuming that there are any strong enough points to physically hook up to, anyway.

      A tether would be a nightmare during telescope maneuvers, as the robot would need to

  • And that would be...?

"I'm a mean green mother from outer space" -- Audrey II, The Little Shop of Horrors

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