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Raumfahrt - AI robots could be our best bet for exploring the moon and Mars

18.07.2023

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n this May 2, 2016 photo, researchers watch a six-foot-tall, 300-pound Valkyrie robot walk slowly at University of Massachusetts-Lowell’s robotics center in Lowell, Mass. “Val,” one of four sister robots built by NASA, could be the vanguard for the colonization of Mars by helping to set up a habitat for future human explorers. NASA spokesman Jay Bolden says the agency aims to get to Mars by 2035 and it’ll be the Valkyries or their descendants paving the way. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Interesting Engineering reports that NASA recently delivered a 6-foot-2, nearly 300-pound humanoid robot called Valkyrie to Woodside Energy in Perth, Australia to test its software. NASA has been developing Valkyrie since 2013 to explore the possibilities of using humanoid robots to help astronauts explore the moon and Mars. Woodside has more earthly applications in mind related to operating its offshore and remote facilities.

Valkyrie, also known as R-5, was started by NASA in 2013 for a possible mission to Mars. It competed in the 2013 DARPA Robotics Challenge. Since then, the humanoid robot has undergone numerous hardware and software upgrades by university partners such as MIT, Northeastern University and the University of Edinburgh.

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