Magically exploring 'the Moon' from afar by Staff Writers Darmstadt, Germany (ESA) Sep 25, 2019
As Europe sleeps, in the early hours of Wednesday 25 September, a small rover in Canada will explore a mock lunar surface, controlled from ESA's ESOC operations centre in Germany. The live experiment will test the technologies required to operate a rover from far away distances, a vital step in the human exploration of the Solar System. Before people step onto unexplored planets and moons, they will orbit above them, remotely controlling rovers and robots on the surface to first explore these alien landscapes. Controllers at the SMILE control room at ESOC will simulate a tele-robotic control experiment called MAGIC, in which the operators will explore the faux-lunar terrain. From Europe, they will carry out science activities such as imaging rocks, performing scans of crater rims and if time permits it will collect a regolith sample. During the experiment, the Canadian Space Agency's "Juno" rover in Montreal will be under night-time conditions when operated from Darmstadt, Germany. An expert at ESA's technical centre ESTEC in The Netherlands will provide scientific expertise throughout the simulated mission.
Preparing for human arrival Such exciting future missions are being made possible by this and many other experiments that make up ESA's METERON project - the Multi-Purpose End-To-End Robotic Operation Network. METERON consists of a whole suite of experiments testing the technologies needed to operate robots on the surface of the Moon, or Mars, from an orbiting Lunar or Martian station.
The goals of METERON are: + To create telepresence in space - a set of technologies which allow a person to feel as if they were present somewhere other than their location - in a microgravity environment + To test human-robot Interaction in highly constrained environments + To test the interoperability of groups of robots and control devices In November, METERON will culminate with another simulation except this time using ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano controlling a robot in The Netherlands from the Space Station. Luca will command the rover to multiple sites and take samples for scientific analysis, much as an astronaut would do orbiting the Moon in the Lunar Gateway.
Europe's operations expertise
Audit faults NASA for failing to detect schedule delays for moon return Washington (Sputnik) Sep 19, 2019 NASA's push to return humans to the Moon by 2024 is threatened by a failure to account for schedule delays and cost overruns, the General Accountability Office said in a report on Wednesday. "For example, NASA should enhance contract management and oversight to improve program outcomes," the report said. "NASA's past approach in this area has left it ill-positioned to identify early warning signs of impending schedule delays and cost growth or reap the benefits of competition." The report re ... read more
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