Robots in Space
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Archives: This event is sold out! Scientists from NASA Ames and the Swiss Space Center reveal robotic applications for future missions to the Moon, Mars, and other destinations in the cosmos. Join the conversation at swissnex San Francisco and learn how robots complement human explorers by performing work autonomously and under remote supervision from Earth. A panel discussion follows the opening presentations. Terry Fong, Director of the Intelligent Robotics Group at the NASA Ames Research Center, shares how the Intelligent Robotics Group (IRG) has been developing and field testing robots inspired by lessons from the Mars Exploration Rovers as well as NASA's human spaceflight programs, such as Apollo, the Space Shuttle, and the International Space Station (ISS). Volker Gass directs the Swiss Space Center at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL). He provides an overview of the center’s activities and bio-inspired robotics for space debris removal. Vytas SunSpiral, a Senior Robotics Researcher at NASA Ames, relays his vision for so-called Smart SPHERES—planned to be small, spherical, free-flying robots that would whiz around the ISS assisting crew and providing a mobile telepresence for ground control. Liam Pedersen explains NASA’s Planetary Lake Lander. The project is building a robotic probe to study a high altitude lake in the Chilean Andes Mountains in an area undergoing rapid change due to global warming and associated glacial retreat. The goal of the project is to both better understand the impacts of global warming and serve as a test bed for the future exploration of the lakes on Saturn’s moon, Titan.
Program6:30 pm doors open
BiosTerry Fong
Volker Gass
Liam PedersenLiam Pedersen's passion is field robotics for scientific and space exploration. He is a graduate of Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute, where he developed the system for a robot to make the first autonomous discovery of a meteorite in Antarctica. He has worked on systems for Mars rovers to more effectively explore their surroundings and navigation systems for the next lunar rovers, and tested robotic systems in Antarctica, the Arctic, various deserts and lakes. Currently he is a senior researcher with Carnegie Mellon University in Silicon Valley, working at NASA's Intelligent Robotics Group in Mountain View, California. |









