NASA Robot Completes Test Drive of Exploration Capabilities

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May 31, 2007

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726 

RELEASE: 07-128

NASA ROBOT COMPLETES TEST DRIVE OF EXPLORATION CAPABILITIES

WASHINGTON - In late May, a NASA-funded robot successfully navigated 
one of the world's deepest sinkholes. The mission could be a prelude 
to a future mission to Jupiter's moon Europa, believed to contain a 
liquid water ocean. The Deep Phreatic Thermal Explorer (DEPTHX) is a 
3,300-pound, computerized, underwater vehicle that makes its own 
decisions. With more than 100 sensors, 36 onboard computers, and 16 
thrusters and actuators, it decides where to swim, which samples to 
collect and how to get home. 

DEPTHX dove repeatedly into the depths of Mexico's mysterious Sistema 
Zacaton sinkhole, or cenote, testing a variety of sensors, sonars, 
and other equipment. The robot also obtained numerous samples of 
water and the gooey biofilm that coated the cenote walls. Reaching 
depths of 1099 feet, the battery-powered robot traveled deeper into 
the sinkhole than human divers could reach. Though initially operated 
on a data-tether, DEPTHX also operated autonomously, without a tether 
or human guidance, for up to eight hours at a time.

On May 26, DEPTHX autonomously descended into Zacaton, collected a 
wall core sample and safely returned to the surface, all without 
scripted instructions. Two days later, again operating without a 
tether, DEPTHX further explored and mapped Zacaton, using a novel 
form of three-dimensional navigation known as Simultaneous 
Localization and Mapping.

Both of these capabilities - autonomous science operations and 
autonomous navigation and mapping - will be useful to a new 
generation of planetary robotic systems.

Funded by NASA's Astrobiology Science and Technology for Exploring 
Planets program and led by principal investigator Bill Stone of Stone 
Aerospace, Inc., Austin, Texas, the project now is ready to take the 
next step in Earth exploration.

"The successful tests in Mexico pave the way for a trip to 
Antarctica's Lake Bonney in late 2008. There, conditions more closely 
resemble those on Europa," said John Rummel, senior scientist for 
astrobiology at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "We're learning how to 
explore Europa by first exploring analogue environments here on 
Earth."

Although NASA's long-term goal is to build a smaller robot that can 
function independently on another world, DEPTHX is generating 
important new discoveries. For the first time, scientists can collect 
specimens from the undisturbed world of sinkholes or other deep 
watery environments, bringing back new types of bacteria that one day 
may lead to earthly benefits such as advanced medical therapies or 
new kinds of materials.

While DEPTHX engineers aimed to build a machine that behaves like a 
microbiologist, smaller versions of the robot also might be equipped 
as safety inspectors to examine underwater dams or drilling 
platforms.

The robot explored the underwater environment and navigated back to 
the surface at the end of each day using 500 three-dimensional maps 
continually updated in real time on supercomputers built by 
scientists at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh.

DEPTHX is a $5 million, three-year project that includes scientists 
and engineers from Stone Aerospace; Carnegie Mellon University; the 
University of Texas at Austin; the Colorado School of Mines, Golden; 
the University or Arizona, Tucson; and the Southwest Research 
Institute, San Antonio, Texas.

To see learn more about the DEPTHX and other NASA projects, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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