posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00authored byAlberto Elfes, John M. Dolan, Gregg Podnar, Sandra Mau, Marcel Bergerman
A successful plan for space exploration requires the
commissioning of fleets of robots to prospect, mine, build,
inspect and maintain structures, and generally assist
astronauts, rendering the overall mission as safe as
reasonably achievable for human beings, the most precious
resource. The authors are currently developing, under the
support of NASA, a Robot Supervision Architecture (RSA)
which will allow a small number of human operators to
safely and efficiently telesupervise a fleet of autonomous
robots. This represents a significant advance over the state
of the art, where currently one robot is overseen by a group
of skilled professionals. In this paper we describe some
aspects of this work, including the architecture itself for
coordination of human and robot work, failure and
contingency management, high-fidelity telepresence, and
operation under limited bandwidth. We also present
highlights of our first application: wide area prospecting of
minerals and water in support of sustained outposts on the
Moon and on Mars.