Communication orale non publiée/Abstract (Colloques, congrès, conférences scientifiques et actes)
Lunarleaper – Unlocking a Subsurface World
Mittelholz, Anna; Stähler, Simon C.; Kolvenbach, Hendrik et al.
2024EGU General Assembly 2024
Peer reviewed
 

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Résumé :
[en] We present LunarLeaper, a robotic explorer concept in response to the ESA 2023 Small Missions call. Pits, volcanic collapse features with near-vertical walls, have been identified across the lunar and Martian surface. These pits are high priority exploration destinations because some, referred to as skylights, might provide access to subsurface lava tube systems. Lava tubes are of particular interest for future human exploration as they offer protection from harmful radiation, micrometeorites and provide temperate and more stable thermal environments compared to the lunar surface. We propose to use a small legged robot (ETH SpaceHopper, <10 kg), to access and investigate the pit edge, using its ability to access complex and steep terrain more safely than a wheeled rover. LunarLeaper will land in Marius Hills within a few 100 m of the pit and traverse across the lateral extent of the hypothesized subsurface lava tube. On its traverse it will take measurements with a ground penetrating radar and a gravimeter, measurements that will allow us to survey the subsurface structure and detect and map lava tube geometry if present. The robot will approach the pit edges and acquire high resolution images of the pit walls containing uniquely exposed layers of the geophysically mapped lava flows and regolith layers. These images will allow not only scientific advances of lunar volcanism and regolith formation, but also enable assessment of the stability of the pit structure and its use as a possible lunar base. The mission is expected to last 1 lunar day. The robot could be delivered to the surface by a small lander, as they are currently developed and planned by various national and commercial agencies and hop off the landing platform without the need for a robotic arm. It is highly flexible in accommodation and can thus make full use of the new international lunar ecosystem.
Disciplines :
Science des matériaux & ingénierie
Auteur, co-auteur :
Mittelholz, Anna 
Stähler, Simon C. 
Kolvenbach, Hendrik
Bickel, Valentin
Church, Joseph
Hamran, Svein-Erik
Karatekin, Ozgur
Ritter, Birgit 
Aaron, Jordan
Anhorn, Barthélémy
COLOMA CHACON, Sofia  ;  University of Luxembourg > Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SNT) > Space Robotics
de Palézieux dit Falconnet, Larissa 
Grott, Matthias
Ogier, Cristophe 
Robertsson, Johan
Walas, Krzysrof
Plus d'auteurs (6 en +) Voir moins
Co-auteurs externes :
yes
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
Lunarleaper – Unlocking a Subsurface World
Date de publication/diffusion :
11 mars 2024
Nom de la manifestation :
EGU General Assembly 2024
Date de la manifestation :
14–19 Apr 2024
Sur invitation :
Oui
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Disponible sur ORBilu :
depuis le 06 janvier 2025

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