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Hi Honey! NASA's Second Astrobee Wakes Up in Space
by Staff Writers
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Nov 26, 2019

Luca Parmitano

European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano performed initial tests of the second Astrobee robot, named Honey, aboard the International Space Station. Astrobee is a free-flying robot system that includes three robots and a docking station for recharging, and will be used to test how robots can assist crew and perform caretaking duties on spacecraft.

After Parmitano unpacked and inspected Honey, he placed the robot on Astrobee's docking station and Honey woke up on the dock, for the first time in space, next to its robotic teammate Bumble. Honey and Bumble are identical, except for their colors. Bumble is dressed in blue and Honey, appropriately, wears yellow.

Because their systems are identical, Honey can take advantage of the work Bumble has done since its initial hardware checkout in April. Station crew and Astrobee's team at NASA's Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley used Bumble to map the interior of the space station's Kibo module. The robots need a map to navigate, and the series of mapping exercises were a necessary step before Bumble took its first solo flight in June.

Honey received Bumble's mapping data though a software update from Astrobee engineers using a data port on the dock. Even though the robots now have the same software, Honey needs more testing before it's ready to fly. The third robot, named Queen, launched to the station in July and will be the last of the three to wake up in space.

Robots like Astrobee will play a significant part in the agency's mission to return to the Moon under the Artemis program, and other deep space missions, by increasing astronaut productivity and helping maintain spacecraft when astronauts are not aboard.


Related Links
Astrobee at NASA
All about the robots on Earth and beyond!


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ROBO SPACE
Scientists help soldiers figure out what robots know
Aberdeen Proving Ground MD (SPX) Nov 25, 2019
An Army-led research team developed new algorithms and filled in knowledge gaps about how robots contribute to teams and what robots know about their environment and teammates. Dr. Kristin Schaefer-Lay, an engineer with the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command's Army Research Laboratory, is part of a multidisciplinary team of reseachers from the Army, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Minnesota and the University of Central Florida - amongst others, who developed specific algo ... read more

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