Abstract
Hayabusa2 is a Japanese asteroid explorer which aims to get some fragments from the C-type asteroid "Ryugu" and bring them back to the Earth. It was launched in December 2014 and arrived at the target asteroid at the end of June 2018 after 3.5 years' interplanetary cruise using an Ion engine propulsion system. The authors developed two tiny twin rovers for Hayabusa2 spacecraft. The objectives of the rovers were performing two technical experiments on the asteroid surface. They had hopping capability fitted for the microgravity environment of small planetary bodies, which was to be evaluated on the asteroid surface. The rovers had full autonomy to move to as many different places as possible and make some observations such as taking images and directly measuring the surface properties. The fully autonomous capability was to be demonstrated on the asteroid surface. The rovers were deployed onto the Northern hemisphere of the target asteroid on 04:06, 21 September 2018 (UTC) at the altitude of approximately 50 meters above the surface. Both rovers made autonomous surface explorations by hopping as planned, which were evidenced by the status and image data transmitted from the rovers. This was the World first surface mobile exploration on small planetary body in our Solar System attained by unmanned robot, as well as the first surface mobile exploration on extraterrestrial body in our country. This paper describes the technical aspects of MINERVA-II rovers, followed by some actual behaviors of the rovers on the asteroid surface which illustlated the great achievments of the two technical challenges by the rovers.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Yoshimitsu, T., & Kubota, T. (2020). Engineering Challenges and Results by MINERVA-II Asteroid Surface Rovers. Journal of the Robotics Society of Japan, 38(8), 754–761. https://doi.org/10.7210/jrsj.38.754
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