Efficient Motion Planning for Mobile Manipulation in Planetary Exploration.

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2024-04-03

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Paz-Delgado, Gonzalo Jesús

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UMA Editorial

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Space is the main frontier to further expand our human civilization and our knowledge of the universe. Exploring space is challenging and expensive since humans are not biologically prepared to survive in the harsh conditions of space. Robots are a suitable alternative though, since they can reach and explore space in a much cheaper way and without risking human lives. In the last decades the so-called planetary exploration vehicles, or rovers, have been able to gather very interesting information about the Moon and Mars. They do so through scientific instruments, which are generally held by a robotic arm that places them in scientifically interesting targets on the surface. Rovers find a main drawback in remote teleoperation from Earth, given the huge challenges of transmitting information in space (delays, limited communication windows). Therefore, the scientific return of planetary missions is greatly increased if the rover can perform the task autonomously, i.e. without the need for human intervention. Considering the mobility provided by the robot's locomotion system and the manipulation capabilities of the robotic arm, planetary rovers can be viewed as mobile manipulators. Since a great amount of the scientific tasks that a rover performs include mobile manipulation movements, autonomously executing them would raise the scientific return of the planetary exploration mission. Though autonomous navigation on Mars is already quite advanced, demonstrated for instance with the Perseverance rover, autonomously performing mobile manipulation tasks is still troublesome. Such a challenge is mainly caused by the complexity of planning and controlling the movements of the mobile platform and the robotic arm together, which cannot be easily achieved in space due to the limited computational resources available out of the Earth.

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