Axel Rover Tethered Dynamics and Motion Planning on Extreme Planetary Terrain

Some of the most appealing science targets for future exploration missions in our solar system lie in terrains that are inaccessible to state-of-the-art robotic rovers such as NASA's Opportunity, thereby precluding in situ analysis of these rich opportunities. Examples of potential high-yield s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abad-Manterola, Pablo
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/6636/
https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/6636/2/Abad-Manterola_2012_thesis.pdf
https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08312011-003358925
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Summary:Some of the most appealing science targets for future exploration missions in our solar system lie in terrains that are inaccessible to state-of-the-art robotic rovers such as NASA's Opportunity, thereby precluding in situ analysis of these rich opportunities. Examples of potential high-yield science areas on Mars include young gullies on sloped terrains, exposed layers of bedrock in the Victoria Crater, sources of methane gas near Martian volcanic ranges, and stepped delta formations in heavily cratered regions. In addition, a recently discovered cryovolcano on Titan and frozen water near the south pole of our own Moon could provide a wealth of knowledge to any robotic explorer capable of accessing these regions. To address the challenge of extreme terrain exploration, this dissertation presents the Axel rover, a two-wheeled tethered robot capable of rappelling down steep slopes and traversing rocky terrain. Axel is part of a family of reconfigurable rovers, which, when docked, form a four-wheeled vehicle nicknamed DuAxel. DuAxel provides untethered mobility to regions of extreme terrain and serves as an anchor support for a single Axel when it undocks and rappels into low-ground. Axel's performance on extreme terrain is primarily governed by three key system components: wheel design, tether control, and intelligent planning around obstacles. Investigations in wheel design and optimizing for extreme terrain resulted in the development of grouser wheels. Experiments demonstrated that these grouser wheels were very effective at surmounting obstacles, climbing rocks up to 90% of the wheel diameter. Terramechanics models supported by experiments showed that these wheels would not sink excessively or become trapped in deformable terrain. Predicting tether forces in different configurations is also essential to the rover's mobility. Providing power, communication, and mobility forces, the tether is Axel's lifeline while it rappels steep slopes, and a cut, abraded, or ruptured tether would result in an untimely end to ...