Article "Deep-Space Probes That Think on Their Own May Guide the Search for Life"
by Dan Franck
June 26, 2017
Article "AI’s next target could be NASA’s mission control"
“There is a realization that the time to action is shrinking. Now it’s microseconds.”
by Eric Berger
May 16, 2017
NASA @60 The role of the robots
Published on Sep 7, 2018
Original air date: Thursday, Sept. 6 at 7 p.m. PT (10 p.m. ET, 0200 UTC)
As NASA celebrates its 60th anniversary, this panel discussion will look back over the decades at how far our robotic exploration has come, and consider where we might be headed.
Much has changed about the way we explore space in the 60 years since NASA began operations on Oct. 1, 1958. Today’s robotic spacecraft are beginning to experiment with laser communications, artificial intelligence and 3-D printed parts. But some of the first spacecraft the U.S. sent to the Moon included parts made of wood; some used to record data on motorized magnetic tape recorders.
Despite all the advances, one thing hasn’t changed: we still rely on robotic spacecraft to extend our senses above and beyond Earth and to blaze a trail as precursors for human explorers.
Panelists:
Rob Manning
Julie Webster
Charles Norton
Anne Marinan
Moderator:
Preston Dyches, JPL Public Outreach Specialist
The potential and problems of spaceship A.I. - Offworld episode 16
Published on Mar 18, 2019
How realistic are pop culture depictions of artificial intelligence on board spaceships? From Star Trek to 2001: A Space Odyssey, we discuss the potential of spaceship A.I. to assist astronauts, along with what research is being done on board the ISS to incorporate digital assistants.
ONLINE Lockheed Martin Robotics Seminar, March 12, 2021: Joshua Vander Hook
Mar 25, 2021
ONLINE Lockheed Martin Robotics Seminar: AI for Spacecraft at NASA JPL
Joshua Vander Hook
Computer Scientist, NIAC Fellow, and Technical Group Supervisor
NASA JPL
Josh will present an overview of the AI Group(s) at JPL, and recent work on single and multi-agent autonomous systems supporting space exploration, Earth science, NASA technology development, and national defense programs.
Социальные закладки