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- <text id=94TT1029>
- <title>
- Aug. 15, 1994: Science:Dante Tours the Inferno
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 15, 1994 Infidelity--It may be in our genes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 41
- Dante Tours the Inferno
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A slip-up mars a robot's successful foray into a volcano. Is
- Dante ready to explore the planets?
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Patrick E. Cole/Anchorage and Mia Schmiedeskamp/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It wasn't until refrigerator-size boulders began hurtling down
- from above that the scientists sitting in an Anchorage, Alaska,
- control room started to get seriously worried. Until then the
- robot known as Dante II had successfully negotiated a steep,
- muddy descent and ambled unconcernedly through hot steam and
- poisonous gases. But even a 10-ft.-tall, 1,700-lb. automaton
- has its limits, and multiton chunks of rock moving at high speed
- were beyond Dante's. "That big one," said Carnegie Mellon University
- robotics expert John Bares, pointing nervously at a video screen
- after a rockslide, "would've wiped us out."
- </p>
- <p> In the end, it was a misstep, not a rock, that toppled Dante,
- and only after the robot had completed its main mission: a detailed
- study of the crater floor 300 ft. below the rim of Alaska's
- active Mount Spurr volcano that included a 3-D survey of the
- hellish terrain and an analysis of gases issuing from belching
- vents. Among the significant results: the first maps of the
- crater's surface, normally hidden by outcroppings and haze.
- Dante also discovered scant sulfur dioxide and hydrogen sulfide
- in the noxious air, implying that the volcano, which erupted
- in 1992, will probably stay quiet for a while.
- </p>
- <p> But important as this news was to volcano experts and the people
- of Anchorage, just 80 miles from Mount Spurr, the volcano study
- was perhaps the least noteworthy part of the robot's mission.
- Despite the final slipup, which toppled Dante and left it stranded
- on the steep mountain slope, the 10-day trek went a long way
- toward proving the potential of a technology that could let
- humans explore a wide range of sites too hazardous to visit
- in person--other volcanoes, deep caves, the barren wastes
- of Antarctica, the ocean floor and even the surfaces of the
- moon and Mars. "The robot has performed like a champ," says
- David Lavery, manager of the Telerobotics Research Program at
- NASA, which paid for most of Dante II's $1.7 million development
- cost.
- </p>
- <p> Dante II is the brainchild of Bares and William ("Red") Whittaker,
- the principal research scientist at Carnegie Mellon's robotics
- lab and a legend among robot designers. Whittaker helped design
- the machine that cleaned up the Three Mile Island reactor after
- its near meltdown in 1979, and he oversaw development of a system
- that will automatically inspect the heat-resistant tiles on
- NASA's space shuttles.
- </p>
- <p> Dante is perhaps his most sophisticated product. Its vaguely
- spider-like aluminum body has eight legs, four of which are
- always on the ground; that provides maximum stability as the
- machine moves forward at a top speed of 3 ft. per minute, stepping
- lightly over obstacles up to 4 ft. high. Eight on-board video
- cameras enable scientists to view the terrain. Even more useful
- is a laser-ranging system--a sort of light-based radar--that makes 30,000 distance measurements every second and generates
- a virtual-reality computer image of the landscape. Says Bares:
- "It gives us a very complete picture of what's around us."
- </p>
- <p> What makes Dante II truly revolutionary, however, is its four
- computers and their controlling software. Although the robot
- was connected by cable to a power generator and transmitter
- at the crater rim, which let the scientists direct it via a
- satellite hookup to the control room, Dante II can operate independently
- at times and did for nearly half the mission, negotiating its
- own path through the boulders.
- </p>
- <p> That skill will be crucial if a Dante-like robot is sent to
- another world. On Mars, for example, says Lavery, contact would
- probably be limited to once a day, and even then the enormous
- distances would result in a minimum 10-minute time lag in communications.
- Dante II is not quite smart enough for full autonomy, but considering
- that it took less than a year to design and build, it is remarkably
- close to self-sufficient. Says Lavery: "The consensus was, if
- we had another four or five months, we would have had that ability."
- </p>
- <p> Another barrier to sending robots to the planets is weight:
- every pound you launch into space is expensive. At nearly a
- ton, Dante II would break the bank. Whittaker is already thinking
- about lighter models, though. And while NASA's Lavery cautions
- that Dante II is still "far from any sort of flight opportunity,"
- he acknowledges that much of the technology used aboard Dante
- II will probably find its way into future space missions. In
- fact, NASA wants to launch a robot explorer toward Mars as early
- as 1996. And a private company working with Carnegie Mellon
- scientists hopes to send a Dante-like robot to the moon in 1997.
- The purely commercial purpose: to gather images for a gamelike,
- virtual-reality tour across the lunar surface.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, Dante II-type robots should be in hot demand
- from earthbound volcanologists, 11 of whom have died exploring
- active craters in the past few years. As for Dante III, or whatever
- Whittaker calls the next generation, its task will be to spare
- humans from facing even greater dangers on other worlds.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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