Institution: | Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, 18 avenue Edouard Belin, 31055, Toulouse Cedex, France |
Abstract: | The very first activities concerning planetary rovers began in 1964 in the Soviet Union and in the United States for lunar missions. Nowadays, with the increase of new mission needs and technical possibilities, several space agencies have engaged in some preliminary programmes in that area with the following objectives: ? —to prepare their involvement in future international rover missions ? —to ease contacts/discussions between scientists and engineers ? —to study and develop a new generation of in situ experiments ? —to perform system/mission analysis in conjunction with the definition of the mission objectives ? —to analyze robotic problematics and implement robotic concepts in the rover architectures.
To perform these activities, several organizations have been set up in Russia, the United States, Japan, Italy and France, according to the relative weight of space engineering over robotic research. In the case of the French programme (‘VAP—Automatic Planetary Rover’), the organization is based on a partnership between the CNES, a scientific committee, four national research laboratories and industries in order to optimize scientific and technical work, with an optimal use of past robotic research studies, as well as to generate spin-offs for Earth applications. Indeed, as a preliminary result, we now have a co-operative agreement with Russia to procure cameras and associated software for the autonomous navigation of the Marsokhod 96 and 2 projects for terrestrial applications of robotic concepts defined within the framework of the VAP programme. |