Crew autonomy for deep space exploration: Lessons from the Antarctic Search for Meteorites |
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Authors: | Stanley G. Love Ralph P. Harvey |
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Affiliation: | 1. NASA Johnson Space Center, Mail Code CB, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, TX 77058, USA;2. Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, 112A. W. Smith Building, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA |
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Abstract: | Future piloted missions to explore asteroids, Mars, and other targets beyond the Moon will experience strict limitations on communication between vehicles in space and control centers on Earth. These limitations will require crews to operate with greater autonomy than any past space mission has demonstrated. The Antarctic Search for Meteorites (ANSMET) project, which regularly sends small teams of researchers to remote parts of the southern continent, resembles a space mission in many ways but does not rely upon a control center. It provides a useful crew autonomy model for planners of future deep space exploration missions. In contrast to current space missions, ANSMET gives the crew the authority to adjust competing work priorities, task assignments, and daily schedules; allows the crew to be the primary monitor of mission progress; demands greater crew accountability for operational errors; requires the crew to make the most of limited communication bandwidth; adopts systems designed for simple operation and failure recovery; and grants the crew a leading role in the selection and stowage of their equipment. |
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Keywords: | ANSMET, Antarctic Search for Meteorites CDR, spacecraft crew commander D/L, downlink FD, Flight Director, the leader of the flight control team in the Mission Control Center ISS, International Space Station KB, kilobyte LEO, low Earth orbit Mars DRA 5.0, NASA Human Exploration of Mars Design Reference Architecture 5.0 NASA, National Aeronautics and Space Administration NSF, National Science Foundation PI, Principal Investigator STS, Space Transportation System (Space Shuttle) U/L, uplink USAP, United States Antarctic Program. |
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