DocumentCode
1249661
Title
AI coming of age: NASA uses AI for autonomous space exploration
Author
Hedberg, Sara
Author_Institution
sara@hedberg.com
Volume
12
Issue
3
fYear
1997
Firstpage
13
Lastpage
15
Abstract
At the end of the 20th Century, many organizations are rethinking the way they do business and are retooling with the ever-moving target of “new technologies”. NASA is no exception. To reduce the cost of space-exploration missions while increasing their number, NASA began the revolutionary New Millennium Program (NMP) in early 1995. At the NMP´s center is a push for self-guiding and self-regulating spacecraft. This will change the ground-control staff requirements from the hundreds required now for a major planetary science mission to a mere handful. The vision is to be able to “fire and forget” a whole series of missions that will go about their business of exploring, contacting home only when they find something of scientific interest or need help. Each spacecraft would manage its own travel, malfunctions, and much of the science
Keywords
aerospace control; computerised navigation; intelligent control; mobile robots; space research; space vehicles; technological forecasting; NASA; New Millennium Program; artificial intelligence; autonomous space exploration; cost reduction; fire-and-forget strategy; ground-control staff requirements; planetary science missions; self-guiding spacecraft; self-regulating spacecraft; space science; spacecraft malfunctions; spacecraft travel; Aerospace engineering; Earth; NASA; Navigation; Space exploration; Space missions; Space technology; Space vehicles; Systems engineering and theory; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
IEEE Expert
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-9000
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/64.590067
Filename
590067
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