Miscellaneous


Adam Frank: Alien Civilizations and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life | Lex Fridman Podcast
Dec 23, 2024

Adam Frank is an astrophysicist studying star systems and the search for extraterrestrial life and alien civilizations.

OUTLINE:

0:00 - Introduction
1:58 - Planet formation
7:08 - Plate tectonics
14:30 - Extinction events
18:41 - Biosphere
21:39 - Technosphere
25:53 - Emergence of intelligence
32:06 - Drake equation
36:20 - Exoplanets
39:04 - Habitable zones
42:06 - Fermi Paradox
51:04 - Alien civilizations
1:00:32 - Colonizing Mars
1:12:48 - Search for aliens
1:29:13 - Alien megastructures
1:35:19 - Kardashev scale
1:40:32 - Detecting aliens
1:47:14 - Warp drives
1:53:21 - Cryogenics
1:56:39 - What aliens look like
2:05:24 - Alien contact
2:16:29 - UFO sightings
2:28:14 - Physics of life
2:54:05 - Nature of time
3:10:29 - Cognition
3:14:53 - Mortality
 

DLR's Advancements in Space Robotic Manipulation

Aug 11, 2025

Given the accumulation of space debris in key orbits around the Earth, robots capable of in-orbit repair, refueling and assembly are crucial for sustainable space exploration. DLR’s contributions to space manipulation began in 1993 with the ROTEX experiment. A small six-axis robotic arm was launched aboard the D2 Space Shuttle mission, where it performed grasping of a free-floating object using various control modes, including teleoperation, shared autonomy and full autonomy modes. This was followed by ROKVISS, a two-joint arm mounted outside the ISS for more than five years. This experiment provided valuable scientific data on the behavior of torque-controlled joints in the harsh space environment. DLR’s latest space robot, the CAESAR robotic arm developed in 2018, is a lightweight, compliant and fully redundant seven-joint manipulator designed for on-orbit operations. Ground testing of the space-destined CAESAR is performed using a cable-driven Motion Suspension System, which minimizes the torques acting on the joints. This allows complex tasks such as docking, latching and grasping to be validated in 3D space. This video details the advances in orbital manipulation made by DLR’s Robotic and Mechatronics Center over the past 30 years, paving the way for the development of robotic technology for space sustainability.

Ferdinand Elhardt, Monica Ekal, et al.Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
 

How astronauts control robots from space

Aug 8, 2025

This summer, a team of robots explored a simulated martian landscape in Germany, remotely guided by an astronaut aboard the International Space Station. This marked the fourth and final session of the Surface Avatar experiment, a collaboration between ESA and the German Aerospace Center (‪@DLRde‬) to develop how astronauts can control robotic teams to perform complex tasks on the Moon and Mars.
The session introduced new levels of autonomy and complexity. ‪@NASA‬ astronaut Jonny Kim operated two robots – ESA’s four-legged Spot and DLR’s humanoid Rollin’ Justin – to retrieve scattered sample containers and deliver them to a lander. Spot navigated the terrain autonomously, while Justin was guided through a mix of direct control and pre-set commands. This setup allowed Jonny to delegate tasks and focus on higher-level decisions, building on other sessions where robots required full teleoperation.
In a second scenario, ESA’s Interact rover transported DLR’s robot dog Bert to a cave entrance. After removing a boulder, Jonny deployed Bert, which then simulated a malfunction in one of its legs. Jonny had to retrain Bert’s walking algorithm in real time before it continued into the cave and detected signs of martian ice. This tested how operators respond to unexpected challenges and adapt robotic systems on the fly.
The robots are controlled from the International Space Station using a custom-built interface developed by ESA and DLR, combining a joystick and a haptic-feedback device. The interface allows switching between first-person view for immersive teleoperation and a top-down map for broader mission oversight. This flexibility lets the astronaut manage multiple robots efficiently, balancing direct control with strategic delegation.

Over four sessions, the Surface Avatar team has refined its approach to human-robot interaction, improving both teleoperation and task delegation to autonomous systems. The experiment has also helped to identify which tasks astronauts prefer to control directly and which can be safely handed over to robotic systems, offering valuable insight for future mission planning.
 
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