As part of the Meteron project – Multi-purpose End-To-End Robotic Operations Network – astronauts will control the Mocup test robot from ESA’s European Space Operations Centre, Darmstadt, Germany.
Mocup is an acronym of Meteron Operations and Communications Prototype.
Credits: ESA
ESA and NASA have tested a communications protocol that will allow astronauts to control robots from space stations orbiting planets or asteroids.
The test marks the way for a trial-run with an astronaut on the International Space Station next week.
Last week a Space Station user centre at the University of Boulder, USA sent a command to a NASA laptop on the International Space Station to start a script that controlled the Mocup robot at ESA’s ESOC operations centre in Darmstadt, Germany.
The robot was commanded to move forward and take pictures, which it performed as planned.
Mocup is one of the robots in ESA’s Meteron – Multi-purpose End-To-End Robotic Operations Network – initiative for future missions to the Moon, Mars and other celestial bodies.
Space exploration will most likely involve sending robotic explorers to test the waters on uncharted planets before sending humans to land.
In the case of distant planets, these robots could be controlled by astronauts in spacecraft orbiting the planet.
“In these tests we are pretending that Earth is the Moon or Mars,” says Kim Nergaard, Meteron Ground Segment and Operations Manager. (@Kimsy)
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