NASA is developing technologies that will allow landing vehicles to automatically identify and navigate to the location of a safe landing site while detecting landing hazards during the final descent to the surface. This is important because future missions -- whether to the Moon, an asteroid, Mars or other location -- will need this capability to land safely near specific resources that are located in potentially hazardous terrain.
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va., has designed three light detection and ranging (lidar) sensors that together can provide all the necessary data for achieving safe autonomous precision landing.
One is a three-dimensional active imaging device, referred to as flash lidar, for detecting hazardous terrain features and identifying safe landing sites. The second is a Doppler lidar instrument for measuring the vehicle velocity and altitude to help land precisely at the chosen site. The third is a high-altitude laser altimeter providing data prior to final approach for correcting the flight trajectory towards the designated landing area.
In conjunction with laser/lidar sensor development at Langley, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., is developing algorithms, or mathematical procedures, for analyzing the acquired three-dimensional lidar maps and determining the most suitable landing site. The resulting Doppler lidar and laser altimeter data are used by the navigation system being developed by NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, and Charles Draper Laboratory, Cambridge, Mass., to control the spacecraft to the identified location.
These technologies have been integrated as part of NASA's Autonomous Landing and Hazard Avoidance Technology (ALHAT) project and are in the process of being demonstrated in a series of flight tests.
The most recent flight tests occurred at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif., in July.
"These were the first tests where we had all three of our laser systems on board and working together as a complete sensor suite," said Langley's Farzin Amzajerdian, technical lead for development of the sensors. "These tests are being viewed as critical by many within NASA."
Robert Reisse, Langley project manager, added, "We were pleased that the flight tests we've conducted so far have resulted in better than expected performance of these sensors."
The main objective of the first test, carried out in May 2008, was to demonstrate the application of 3-D imaging technology, or 'flash' lidar, for topography mapping and hazard detection.
The second round of flight tests, completed in August 2008, was to evaluate the capabilities of the Doppler lidar. This lidar provides high reliability vehicle velocity vector, altitude and attitude with about two orders of magnitude higher precision than radars.
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va., has designed three light detection and ranging (lidar) sensors that together can provide all the necessary data for achieving safe autonomous precision landing.
One is a three-dimensional active imaging device, referred to as flash lidar, for detecting hazardous terrain features and identifying safe landing sites. The second is a Doppler lidar instrument for measuring the vehicle velocity and altitude to help land precisely at the chosen site. The third is a high-altitude laser altimeter providing data prior to final approach for correcting the flight trajectory towards the designated landing area.
In conjunction with laser/lidar sensor development at Langley, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., is developing algorithms, or mathematical procedures, for analyzing the acquired three-dimensional lidar maps and determining the most suitable landing site. The resulting Doppler lidar and laser altimeter data are used by the navigation system being developed by NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, and Charles Draper Laboratory, Cambridge, Mass., to control the spacecraft to the identified location.
These technologies have been integrated as part of NASA's Autonomous Landing and Hazard Avoidance Technology (ALHAT) project and are in the process of being demonstrated in a series of flight tests.
The most recent flight tests occurred at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif., in July.
"These were the first tests where we had all three of our laser systems on board and working together as a complete sensor suite," said Langley's Farzin Amzajerdian, technical lead for development of the sensors. "These tests are being viewed as critical by many within NASA."
Robert Reisse, Langley project manager, added, "We were pleased that the flight tests we've conducted so far have resulted in better than expected performance of these sensors."
The main objective of the first test, carried out in May 2008, was to demonstrate the application of 3-D imaging technology, or 'flash' lidar, for topography mapping and hazard detection.
The second round of flight tests, completed in August 2008, was to evaluate the capabilities of the Doppler lidar. This lidar provides high reliability vehicle velocity vector, altitude and attitude with about two orders of magnitude higher precision than radars.
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