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Advancing the Scientific Frontier with Increasingly Autonomous Systems

Authors :
Amini, Rashied
Azari, Abigail
Bhaskaran, Shyam
Beauchamp, Patricia
Castillo-Rogez, Julie
Castano, Rebecca
Chung, Seung
Day, John
Doyle, Richard
Feather, Martin
Fesq, Lorraine
Frank, Jeremy
Furlong, P. Michael
Ingham, Michel
Kennedy, Brian
Kolcio, Ksenia
Nesnas, Issa
Rasmussen, Robert
Reeves, Glenn
Sorice, Cristina
Theiling, Bethany
Wyatt, Jay
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

A close partnership between people and partially autonomous machines has enabled decades of space exploration. But to further expand our horizons, our systems must become more capable. Increasing the nature and degree of autonomy - allowing our systems to make and act on their own decisions as directed by mission teams - enables new science capabilities and enhances science return. The 2011 Planetary Science Decadal Survey (PSDS) and on-going pre-Decadal mission studies have identified increased autonomy as a core technology required for future missions. However, even as scientific discovery has necessitated the development of autonomous systems and past flight demonstrations have been successful, institutional barriers have limited its maturation and infusion on existing planetary missions. Consequently, the authors and endorsers of this paper recommend that new programmatic pathways be developed to infuse autonomy, infrastructure for support autonomous systems be invested in, new practices be adopted, and the cost-saving value of autonomy for operations be studied.<br />Comment: 10 pages (compared to 8 submitted to PSADS), 2 figures, submitted to National Academy of Sciences Planetary Science and Astrobiology Decadal Survey 2023-2032

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2009.07363
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/25c2cfeb.a09526a1