Feedback Form
   
Add to Google
Moon GPS System Moon GPS System
Monday, August 18, 2008 - Ehud Rattner
Home >> Picture Of The Day >> Space
  Peralink
Moon GPS System
Related Pictures
Earth in HD
2 Candidates Sites for a 30m Telescope
Ron Li from Ohio State University has developed navigation software for the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity. The navigation system, which could also help future astronauts find their way around the Moon, is not based on satellites; instead, the system will rely on signals from a set of sensors including lunar beacons, stereo cameras, and orbital imaging sensors.

Ron Li has been awarded a $1.2 million grant to develop a navigation system to be used on the Moon. Since the Moon has no landmarks or cues to help determine distance, astronauts might get lost or misjudge a distant object's size and location quite easily. Quite clearly, such situations could be extremely dangerous. Using sensors, inertial navigation systems, cameras, computer processors, and image processors, Li developed a system designed to make navigation on the Moon easier. 

Li explained that images taken from an orbiting vessel will be combined with images taken from the Moon’s surface to create maps of lunar terrain. Motion sensors located on lunar vehicles and on the astronauts themselves will enable the computers to calculate the current location, while signals from lunar beacons (the lunar lander) and base stations will give astronauts a picture of their surroundings, similarly to images created by GPS devices for drivers on Earth. The entire system has been named the Lunar Astronaut Spatial Orientation and Information System (LASOIS). 

Astronauts who will arrive on the Moon will be equipped with a keypad and screen, possibly located directly on their spacesuits, which will enable the viewing of their location and searching for new destinations. According to Li, the astronauts’ safety is his team’s top priority. The team includes experts in psychology, human-computer interaction, and engineering, who have all worked to make the system as suitable as possible. "We will help with navigation, but also with astronauts' health," Li said. "We want them to avoid the stress of getting lost, or getting frustrated with the equipment; lunar navigation isn't just a technology problem, it's also biomedical." 

TFOT has covered the new Crew Mobility Chassis, which is a concept truck for lunar transportation, and NASA’s testing of an inflatable habitat, designed to be used on the Moon. Other related TFOT stories include VELO, the world's smallest GPS tracker, the Xplorer GPS Smart Shoe, which tracks the wearer's location and provides a history of their movement, and the new generation of GPS chips, made by the California based company SiRF and the Swiss U-Blox company. 

For more information on the LASOIS, see Ohio State University’s website.

Other Articles 2008 in Science, Medicine and Space 2008 in Science, Medicine and Space DARPA's Urban Challenge 2007 DARPA's Urban Challenge 2007

Related News Toxic Chemical Doesn't Preclude Life on Mars Toxic Chemical Doesn't Preclude Life on Mars The Phoenix Has Landed The Phoenix Has Landed

Other Columns One More Meaning of 'Computer Science' One More Meaning of 'Computer Science' Detroit’s Dream of Aircraft Production Detroit’s Dream of Aircraft Production



No comments have been posted for this item.

Add a New Comment
Your name:   0/20
Subject:  0/30
Your Comment:  0/999
Type the following letters: Visual CAPTCHA
Please keep your comments related to the above item's topic. TFOT reserves the right to delete any unrelated comment without notice.

Picture Of The Day
Floating Jelly Hat
Floating Jelly Hat

Video
Paralysed Rats Sprint
Paralysed Rats Sprint

Site Of The Week
Galaxy Zoo
Galaxy Zoo

Personal Column
Detroit’s Dream of Aircraft Production
Dr. Daniel Uziel
Detroit’s Dream of Aircraft Production
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise With Us | Site Profile
Copyright © 2007 The Future of Things. All rights reserved.