The first  humanoid robot ever is bound for space 
By _ASSOCIATED PRESS_ (mailto:[email protected])   
11/02/2010  16:54 

Robot's space  debut; a small step for man, a giant leap for "tinmankind." 
Talkbacks (1)  

 
 
Space is about to  get its first humanoid from planet Earth.

Robonaut 2 — affectionately  known as R2 — is hitching a one-way ride to 
the _International  Space Station_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/International_Space_Station)  this week 
aboard the final flight of space shuttle  
Discovery.

It's the first humanoid robot ever bound for space, a $2.5  million 
mechanical and electrical marvel that NASA hopes one day will assist  
flesh-and-bone astronauts in orbit.

Imagine, its creators say, a future  where Robonaut could take over space 
station cleaning duties; spend hours  outside in the extreme heat and cold, 
patiently holding tools for spacewalking  astronauts; and handle emergencies 
like toxic leaks or fires.

Why,  Robonaut's descendants could even scout out asteroids, Mars and other 
worlds in  the decades ahead, paving the way for humans.

The adventure begins  Wednesday afternoon, with the planned final launch of 
Discovery and Robonaut's  six human crewmates. Mission managers gave the 
green light Monday for the new  launch date; shuttle gas leaks had to be 
repaired before the countdown could  begin and forced a two-day delay.

"While it might be just a single step  for this robot, it's really a giant 
leap forward for tinmankind," said Rob  Ambrose, acting chief of Johnson 
Space Center's automation, robotics and  simulation division in Houston.

For now, R2 — a collaboration between  NASA and _General  Motors_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/General_Motors)  — exists only from the 
waist up. 
It measures 3 feet 4 inches (1  meter) tall and weighs 330 pounds. Each arm 
is 2 feet (0.6 meters) 8 inches (20  centimeters) long.

Legs are still in the works. But, oh, what an upper  body: perfectly toned 
arms and hands with palms, a robotic rarity, along with  broad shoulders and 
a washboard stomach. _Arnold  Schwarzenegger_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Arnold_Schwarzenegger) , Hollywood's cyborg 
Terminator, would be proud.

Watch  Robonaut lifting a 20-pound (9-kilogram) dumbbell, and "you can kind 
of feel the  burn," Ambrose said, showing a video at a recent news 
conference.

Unlike  people who tend to cheat, "this robot will really do what the 
physical trainers  tell you to do, which is to do the bicep curls nice and 
slow," 
he  said.

Made of aluminum and nickel-plated carbon fiber, the torso and arms  are 
padded to protect Robonaut and the astronauts, all the way down to the five  
fingers on each hand. No metal, bony-looking fingers for this robot.

R2's  eyes are where they should be: in its gold-colored head. Four visible 
light  cameras are located behind the robot's visor, and an infrared camera 
is in its  mouth for depth perception.

But its brain is in its stomach; engineers  had nowhere else to put the 
computerized gray matter.

A backpack holds a  power system for plugging R2 into the space station. On 
an asteroid or Mars, the  backpack would contain batteries.

The joints are filled with springs for  give, and more than 350 electrical 
sensors are scattered throughout, allowing R2  to sense even a feather with 
its fingertips.

NASA began working on its  first dexterous robot — the landlubbing Robonaut 
1 — in 1997. Lacking money, the  project ceased in 2006. General Motors 
stepped in with the intention of  improving car manufacturing and better 
protecting workers. Early this year, the  much speedier R2 was unveiled.

NASA made room for the robot on one of its  last few shuttle flights. It is 
Discovery's 39th mission and the next-to-last  shuttle flight for NASA, 
although an additional trip may be added next  year.

R2 is boxed up and stowed away for launch. Its identical twin —  identical 
on the outside, anyway — is at Kennedy Space Center, posing for  pictures 
and awaiting liftoff.

"I'm not even a little nervous; NERVES OF  ALUMINUM!!!" R2 said last week 
in a Twitter update under AstroRobonaut. (A NASA  public relations woman and 
Robonaut team member are serving as ghost  tweeters.)

The robot will remain tucked away at the space station until  late December 
— a nice Christmas present for the station's six inhabitants,  Ambrose 
figures.

While the space station already has Canadian and  Japanese robotic arms — 
resembling cranes — human operators are needed. Once  given orders, R2 can 
carry out preprogrammed tasks by itself.

First will  come a series of tests to see how Robonaut operates in 
weightlessness atop a  fixed pedestal.

Legs will be needed before Robonaut can tackle indoor  chores like wiping 
handrails or vacuuming air filters. NASA hopes to send up  legs in late 2011, 
followed a year later by torso and computer enhancements  enabling the 
robot to venture out on spacewalks.

The objective is to help  astronauts, not replace them, NASA stresses. 
Humans have been living  continuously on the space station for 10 years — the 
actual record-setting  anniversary is Tuesday — and the wish is for 10 more.


The beauty of  Robonaut, officials say, is it's strong yet safe and 
trustworthy enough to work  right next to humans. It's also serenely mute, more 
WALL-E than R2-D2 of "Star  Wars" fame.

Discovery's astronaut-physician, Michael Barratt, would have  loved to pawn 
off toilet cleaning while living at the space station last year.  As 
appealing as Robonaut is, he cautions "it will be a long time" before the  
robot 
can do a job as quickly and efficiently as a space station  human.

Robonaut's strength, Barratt said, will be  emergencies.

"Going into a toxic atmosphere to throw a switch or close a  valve," he 
explained.

And, in a final salute, going down with the  ship.

R2 will be on board when the space station stops operating sometime  after 
2020 and NASA sends it hurtling toward a grave in the  Pacific.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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