System
overview. Credit: NASA
A
combined team of engineers from NASA Ames Research Center and KBR has designed
and built a robot system that can autonomously build structures using specially
designed lattice blocks. In their paper published in the journal Science
Robotics, the group describes the robots and the lattice blocks they use to
build structures and how they whole system works.
As NASA and other entities consider the possibility of sending humans to the moon and possibly to other planets, they must also consider the means by which they will be sheltered. Ideally, robots could be sent to desired destinations prior to the arrival of humans to build such structures. In this new study, the research team developed a type of robotic system that is capable of autonomously building such desired structures.
System overview. Credit: NASA
The system comprises three robots,
two that transport lattice blocks and one that connects them. The lattice
blocks are hollow, with edges reminiscent of coat hanger wire. All three of the
robots can latch onto any block—two robots pick up the blocks from a given
location and bring them to the construction site. In addition to picking up, carrying and placing
blocks, the transport robots can hand blocks to one another.
System
overview. Credit: NASA
The research team has already tested the system by having it build several structures—in one example, they built a shelter from 256 blocks, a feat that took the system 4.2 continuous days. They suggest a system similar to theirs could be sent to the moon or beyond to build structures, towers or other facilities prior to the arrival of astronauts. In its current design, the astronauts would have to apply a covering of some type over the outer blocks, but that could likely be automated, as well.
by Bob Yirka , Tech Xplore
Source: Robots
that can autonomously build structures out of lattice blocks (techxplore.com)
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