A prototype of a robot designed to explore subsurface
oceans of icy moons is reflected in the water’s surface during a pool test at
Caltech in September. Conducted by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the
testing showed the feasibility of a mission concept for a swarm of mini
swimming robots.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
In a competition swimming pool, engineers tested prototypes for a
futuristic mission concept: a swarm of underwater robots that could look for
signs of life on ocean worlds.
When NASA’s Europa Clipper reaches
its destination in 2030, the spacecraft will prepare to aim an array of
powerful science instruments toward Jupiter’s moon Europa during 49 flybys,
looking for signs that the ocean beneath the moon’s icy crust could sustain
life. While the spacecraft, which launched Oct. 14, carries the most advanced science hardware NASA has ever
sent to the outer solar system, teams are already developing the next
generation of robotic concepts that could potentially plunge into the watery
depths of Europa and other ocean worlds, taking the science even further.
This is where an ocean-exploration mission concept called SWIM comes in. Short for Sensing With Independent Micro-swimmers, the project envisions a swarm of dozens of self-propelled, cellphone-size swimming robots that, once delivered to a subsurface ocean by an ice-melting cryobot, would zoom off, looking for chemical and temperature signals that could indicate life.
Dive into underwater robotics testing with NASA’s
futuristic SWIM (Sensing With Independent Micro-swimmers) concept for a swarm
of miniature robots to explore subsurface oceans on icy worlds, and see a JPL
team testing a prototype at a pool at Caltech in Pasadena, California, in
September 2024. NASA/JPL-Caltech
“People might ask, why is NASA
developing an underwater robot for space exploration? It’s because there are
places we want to go in the solar system to look for life, and we think life
needs water. So we need robots that can explore those environments — autonomously,
hundreds of millions of miles from home,” said Ethan Schaler, principal
investigator for SWIM at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California.
Under development at JPL, a series
of prototypes for the SWIM concept recently braved the waters of a 25-yard (23-meter) competition
swimming pool at Caltech in Pasadena for testing. The results were encouraging.
SWIM Practice
The SWIM team’s latest iteration is
a 3D-printed plastic prototype that relies on low-cost, commercially made
motors and electronics. Pushed along by two propellers, with four flaps for
steering, the prototype demonstrated controlled maneuvering, the ability to
stay on and correct its course, and a back-and-forth “lawnmower” exploration
pattern. It managed all of this autonomously, without the team’s direct
intervention. The robot even spelled out “J-P-L.”
Just in case the robot needed
rescuing, it was attached to a fishing line, and an engineer toting a fishing
rod trotted alongside the pool during each test. Nearby, a colleague reviewed
the robot’s actions and sensor data on a laptop. The team completed more than
20 rounds of testing various prototypes at the pool and in a pair of tanks at
JPL.
“It’s awesome to build a robot from
scratch and see it successfully operate in a relevant environment,” Schaler
said. “Underwater robots in general are very hard, and this is just the first
in a series of designs we’d have to work through to prepare for a trip to an
ocean world. But it’s proof that we can build these robots with the necessary
capabilities and begin to understand what challenges they would face on a
subsurface mission.”
Swarm Science
A model of the final envisioned SWIM robot, right,
sits beside a capsule holding an ocean-composition sensor. The sensor was
tested on an Alaskan glacier in July 2023 through a JPL-led project called
ORCAA (Ocean Worlds Reconnaissance and Characterization of Astrobiological
Analogs).
The wedge-shaped prototype used in most of the pool tests was about 16.5
inches (42 centimeters) long, weighing 5 pounds (2.3 kilograms). As conceived
for spaceflight, the robots would have dimensions about three times smaller —
tiny compared to existing remotely operated and autonomous underwater
scientific vehicles. The palm-size swimmers would feature miniaturized,
purpose-built parts and employ a novel wireless underwater acoustic
communication system for transmitting data and triangulating their positions.
Digital versions of these little
robots got their own test, not in a pool but in a computer simulation. In an
environment with the same pressure and gravity they would likely encounter
on Europa, a virtual swarm of 5-inch-long (12-centimeter-long)
robots repeatedly went looking for potential signs of life. The computer
simulations helped determine the limits of the robots’ abilities to collect
science data in an unknown environment, and they led to the development of
algorithms that would enable the swarm to explore more efficiently.
The simulations also helped the
team better understand how to maximize science return while accounting for
tradeoffs between battery life (up to two hours), the volume of water the
swimmers could explore (about 3 million cubic feet, or 86,000 cubic meters),
and the number of robots in a single swarm (a dozen, sent in four to five
waves).
In addition, a team of
collaborators at Georgia Tech in Atlanta fabricated and tested an ocean
composition sensor that would enable each robot to simultaneously measure
temperature, pressure, acidity or alkalinity, conductivity, and chemical
makeup. Just a few millimeters square, the chip is the first to combine all
those sensors in one tiny package.
Of course, such an advanced concept
would require several more years of work, among other things, to be ready for a
possible future flight mission to an icy moon. In the meantime, Schaler
imagines SWIM robots potentially being further developed to do science work
right here at home: supporting oceanographic research or taking critical
measurements underneath polar ice.
More About
SWIM
Caltech manages JPL for NASA. JPL’s SWIM project was supported by Phase I and II funding from NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program under the agency’s Space Technology Mission Directorate. The program nurtures visionary ideas for space exploration and aerospace by funding early-stage studies to evaluate technologies that could transform future NASA missions. Researchers across U.S. government, industry, and academia can submit proposals.
By: Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
Source: NASA Ocean World Explorers Have to Swim Before They Can Fly - NASA
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