您现在的位置是:半岛新闻网 > 产品中心
'Robot swarms' could build Mars shelters underground
半岛新闻网2024-09-22 03:28:43【产品中心】1人已围观
简介It sounds like the stuff of science fiction. In one European team’s proposal for off-world construct
It sounds like the stuff of science fiction. In one European team’s proposal for off-world construction, swarms of autonomous, cooperative robots would dig and reinforce underground ant-like colonies for human habitation on Mars.
The European Space Agency recently awarded a grant to a team of engineers at the Robotic Building lab at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, to study how robot swarms could build such structures. This month, the founder and current leader of the lab, engineer Henriette Bier, posted some preliminary details of her team’s concept, which would use Zebro robots to excavate underground housing networks on the red planet, fortified with Martian, 3D-printed concrete.
The project is very much in the conceptual phase, but the technologies to make it possible are coming along on Earth, says Jekan Thanga, a robotics researcher not involved with the Delft team who specializes in off-world technologies at the University of Arizona. But, he says, “doing it off-world is another challenge.”
Mars has a host of dangers for future human explorers looking to reside there. From high levels of ionizing radiation to drastic day-to-night temperature swings, long-term residents will need more than a sturdy tent to live comfortably. Living several meters underground would block out most of the radiation and provide for a more stable temperature.
[Related: Life could be hiding deep under Mars]
Amazon isn’t offering free shipping to Mars yet, so getting building supplies there is still highly pricey. That’s why researchers are looking at ways of using locally sourced materials as much as possible in construction of Martian habitats.
The Zebro robots—also developed at Delft, with the footprint of just a sheet of paper—would excavate tunnels by spiraling downward and fortify the walls as they go with concrete. Tapping into what’s immediately abundant, the concrete could be made onsite by combining cement with some of the excavated dust and rock. Some robots would dig while others reinforce walls with autonomously generated 3D-printed structures.
Bier’s team consists of her students and other robotics faculty at Delft. She says using 3D-printing technologies, she and her team “have been developing material designs that are porous,” which allows for faster construction and more efficient use of materials. The empty pockets would also make for better insulation. On top of pure optimization, 3D printing allows for unconventional, versatile design shapes devised by artificial intelligence.
Digging and building on unknown Martian terrain will “definitely be a challenge” Bier says. The robots will have to adapt to a harsh and disordered terrain—but artificial intelligence could make this possible, she says. Swarms of robots are useful because they can communicate with each other, do multiple tasks simultaneously, and keep functioning if one member becomes inoperable.
This is similar to the way termites work together. “They work in teams, yet, if you kill one individual … the team continues no problem,” Thanga says.
This project isn’t for the first wave of Martian settlers, who will likely need something more temporary and modular. Because these underground colonies would require concrete, the first order of business would be to build the infrastructure to produce concrete—and preferably more robots, too.
[Related: Some of Earth’s tiniest living things could survive on Mars]
NASA and other groups have looked at different potential shelters on Mars, Thanga says, including ideas for houses made from sandbags or ice. But deep underground structures provide a more permanent option and require little water—a precious resource on such a dry planet.
Bier says that the construction industry is generally conservative, so it hasn’t seriously invested in new technologies like robotics or 3D-printed homes, which a few startups are working on. She points to the company ICON, which has built inexpensive concrete homes in just a few days and is looking at 3D-printing structures on the Moon. In 2019, NASA also hosted a 3D-printed habitat challenge in which teams competed to design sustainable housing designs for off-world living.
She hopes that furthering these technologies on Earth will lead to advances in off-world technology, and that that off-world technology could in turn lead to further advances on Earth.
Adding in swarm technology could amplify these advances even further. Thanga says humans have been using the logic of swarm societies for thousands of years. A group of Roman soldiers could join together in a turtle-like formation, covered by shields on all sides to beat unorganized but similarly armed enemies. “They became invincible that way,” Thanga says. Perhaps robot swarms on Mars may one day be able to achieve similar feats.
很赞哦!(66797)
相关文章
- 实干担当抓落实 多措并举促发展
- Horner says 'business as usual' at Red Bull despite probe
- Osaka beats Garcia in Qatar to avenge AO loss
- Two France
- Webb scientists haven't found a rocky world with air. But now they have a plan.
- PyeongChang 'ready to welcome the world' at next Winter Olympics: IOC
- Two France
- S. Korea releases footage of ballistic missiles in response to North’s aggression
- 13 Astronomical Clocks Connecting Time And Space
- Tuchel to leave Bayern Munich
热门文章
站长推荐
From Prairie Grasslands to Man
Facebook sued by news media outlet over 'Russia state
Immobile hands Lazio UCL advantage over troubled Bayern
Microsoft confirms it's in talks to buy TikTok, and Trump is involved
Google Search tries new tactics for limiting explicit deepfakes
[Weekender] Kids go wild in ‘infant forests’
Ratcliffe completes purchase of minority stake in Man Utd
全国人大代表、阳春“鸡司令”谢汝朋:建议开展联合育种、扶持特色农业