An experimental NASA robot could get a big upgrade thanks to Google. The two parties have been working together to integrate Google's Project Tango smartphone prototype — which can detect and map the world around it
using a series of sensors — onto NASA's SPHERES — brightly colored,
volleyball-sized robots designed to float around the International Space
Station and assist astronauts. Right now, the SPHERES can perform basic
navigation inside of a limited section of the ISS by using ultrasound
and detecting infrared light, but using Tango's more detailed detection
methods, NASA hopes to let the robots explore more of the station and
navigate entirely on their own.
"This is no ordinary upgrade."
"This is no ordinary upgrade," Terry
Fong, director of the Intelligent Robotics Group at NASA's Ames
Research Center, says in a statement. "We’ve customized cutting-edge
commercial technologies to help us answer questions like: How can robots
help humans live and work in space? What will happen when humans
explore other worlds with robots by their side? Can we make this happen
sooner, rather than later?" Google and NASA have already conducted tests
to see how SPHERES and Tango behave in a zero-gravity environment. The
partnership began last summer, and a Tango smartphone should be sent up
later this year.
The SPHERES are able to
navigate the station by propelling themselves with gas thrusters. So
far, they've been used to move objects during scientific tests and to
experiment with techniques that could allow the robots to assist
astronauts with emergency repairs and basic servicing. NASA has a much
bigger vision for them in the long run though: while they aren't even
built to leave the ISS right now, NASA imagines that one day similar
robots could fly through space to inspect the exterior of the space
station or some other vehicle that they've been along for the ride with.
Interestingly enough, this
isn't the first Google smartphone to be sent up to the ISS and strapped
to SPHERES: in 2011, a Nexus S was sent up too, also with the intention
of augmenting NASA's SPHERES with more sensors.
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