Repository logo
  • English
  • Italiano
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
Repository logo
  • English
  • Italiano
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. ASI Community
  3. ASI Multidisciplinary Collection
  4. Future potential applications of robotics for the International Space Station
 
  • Details

Future potential applications of robotics for the International Space Station

Author(s)
Di Pippo, Simonetta
Colombina, G.
Boumans, R.
Subjects

Interactive autonomy

International Space S...

Payload tending

Robotic system servic...

Space robotics

Date Issued
1998-01-01
Abstract
The International Space Station (ISS) will offer a unique infrastructure to enable scientists and engineers to conduct their experiments over a large timescale and to gain experiment results on a regular basis. The ISS offers both exposed accommodation of payloads and facilities inside the pressurised laboratory modules. For a number of reasons, manipulative tending of such payloads and the servicing of Space Station system elements cannot be completely performed by astronauts. This is why robotic systems are expected to play an ever increasing role in the operation of the ISS. This paper describes three robotics concepts which can be important enhancements of the currently approved ISS robotics infrastructure: a small relocateable system mounted in front of facility racks for tending of internal payloads, a medium size dexterous system to tend to payloads on an external platform, and an extension of the large European Robot Arm (ERA) by a dexterous bi-arm “end effector†for external system servicing.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/499
Journal
Robotics and Autonomous Systems
URL
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921889097000560
Explore by
  • Communities & Collections
  • Research Outputs

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback