
Science Autonomy for Rover Subsurface Exploration of the Atacama Desert
Author(s) -
Wettergreen David,
Foil Greydon,
Furlong Michael,
Thompson David R.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
ai magazine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.597
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 2371-9621
pISSN - 0738-4602
DOI - 10.1609/aimag.v35i4.2554
Subject(s) - terrain , planetary surface , mars exploration program , computer science , exploration of mars , data quality , planner , robot , data collection , remote sensing , systems engineering , field (mathematics) , motion planning , real time computing , artificial intelligence , engineering , geography , astrobiology , cartography , metric (unit) , operations management , physics , statistics , mathematics , pure mathematics
As planetary rovers expand their capabilities, traveling longer distances, deploying complex tools, and collecting voluminous scientific data, the requirements for intelligent guidance and control also grow. This, coupled with limited bandwidth and latencies, motivates on‐board autonomy that ensures the quality of the science data return. Increasing quality of the data requires better sample selection, data validation, and data reduction. Robotic studies in Mars‐like desert terrain have advanced autonomy for long‐distance exploration and seeded technologies for planetary rover missions. In these field experiments the remote science team uses a novel control strategy that intersperses preplanned activities with autonomous decision making. The robot performs automatic data collection, interpretation, and response at multiple spatial scales. Specific capabilities include instrument calibration, visual targeting of selected features, an on‐board database of collected data, and a long‐range path planner that guides the robot using analysis of current surface and prior satellite data. Field experiments in the Atacama Desert of Chile over the past decade demonstrate these capabilities and illustrate current challenges and future directions.