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- From: gwh@soda.berkeley.edu (George William Herbert)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: With telepresence, who needs people in Earth orbit?
- Date: 22 Aug 1992 06:46:29 GMT
- Organization: Dis-
- Lines: 94
- Sender: gwh@soda.berkeley.edu (George William Herbert)
- Message-ID: <174ns5INNqom@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <1992Aug21.001004.3768@samba.oit.unc.edu> <171u2uINNfsq@agate.berkeley.edu> <1992Aug21.123736.1575@samba.oit.unc.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: soda.berkeley.edu
-
- cecil@physics.unc.edu (Gerald Cecil) writes:
- >gwh@soda.berkeley.edu (George William Herbert) writes:
-
- >>Have you talked to someone who builds or works with space robotics?
- >No, I was hoping that there might be someone out there who would counteract
- >hype from virtual-reality types.
-
- Ok.
-
- >>When anyone suggests replacing humans in the short term, they laugh.
- >>Space robotics aren't as strong, for the most part, have less degrees
- >>of freedom _and_ less limbs, less end effector dexterity, and more
- >>likely failure points than a man in space. They're safer, but often
- >>can't do the job. (note that an astronaut in EVA can't do everything
- >>either. both together are much more capable.)
- >OK, fine. But the only current `job' for SSF is apparently biological
- >research on the long-term effects on microgravity, which means loading
- >rats into a centrifuge. I submit that that can be done with a conveyor
- >belt. Sure, you need people to (dextrously) put the station together
- >(or at least to install the rats in their cages), but after that its all
- >BF Skinner (push the bar, get the food pellet, wait for the scalpel).
-
- Microgravity biology most certainly is not the only thing that's
- going to be done on Freedom 8-) There's going to be space
- and earth science (both with maintenance needs), materials science,
- (with maintenance and operational needs) and biology with maintenance
- and operational tending needs.
-
- Let's look at Bio first. Fine control teleoperation isn't very advanced;
- I'm not aware of anyone who's done even simple surgery or inserting an
- IV line or needs via telepresense. I'm not saying it's impossible, but
- we need a much higher degree of sensors, feedback, mobility, and
- reaction time than what we have now. One hand gloved three-fingered
- hand and fuzzy monocular vision aren't all that useful. Especially
- with a potential six second delay in the loop, much smaller than the average
- rat's squirm time. (Why six seconds? Well, once to TRDSS, once down to
- TDRSS ground station, once back to geostationary to a comsat and down
- again to NASA's center (Johnson?) who's doing station ops, and then a
- second while a NASA computer integrity checks the data. And then back
- again with your response 8-) (I agree that the delay is too long.
- Talk to the NASA Freedom telerobotics people about it. The people
- at Rice and UTexas and Johnson who are playing with a prototype
- system agree but haven't been able to shorten that delay yet).
-
- And then there are the maintenance problems.
-
- Ok. Ignoring other detail problems, here's a neat experiment to try and
- see how difficult this can be. Imagine that you've got a bundle of
- wires that's worked loose and needs to be tied to a structural member.
- Simulate this with two sticks about 2 feet (0.6 meter) long. Get some
- friends to hold these. Now, you have some string with which you're
- going to attach the cable bundle to the structure. Take one hand
- (this is a one armed robot) and put three gloves on it (or one ski glove).
- Lie down on your back, have your friends hold the two sticks nearly
- at your full arms reach. Tie the string around the two objects
- with one hand and two fingers. Oh, and you can't cheat and use gravity.
- Your friends have to enforce not letting you use gravity.
- If you can't do this (hint: about one person in three could last
- time I saw the demo) try with five fingers. Or with two hands with
- two fingers each.
-
- A more accurate version allows two arms with two fingers, but blindfolds
- the person who's holding (someone else has to teleoperate him).
-
- The scary part is that EVA ops aren't much easier. But in a pressurized
- environment, people have a lot of advantages.
-
- >>Or are you just trying to start a flamewar?
- >Well, I'm certainly getting sick of some of the topics that have been
- >battered to death here. We seem to be going round and round on how to
- >supply SSF or get the crew away when things fall apart. I'd still like
- >to see a discussion of *why*, in the present scheme of things, people are
- >necessary for Earth orbit operations. Seems to me you could (in the spirit
- >of many discussions in this group) free up a lot of $ (possibly some small
- >fraction of which could be used to improve the dexterity of robots.) This
- >is, after all, sci.space, not sci.humansinspace.waiting4Soyuz
-
- People are necessary because space is a hard plase to work. Things
- don't work the same there, in ways that we don't totally understand yet.
- Robots, especially ones at a distance, are hard to use for aforementione
- reasons. They also break.
-
- We can't get away (now) with just using robots in space. We also can't
- do as much with just people as you can with both people and robots.
- If you think that space operations are going to increase in general,
- it might be wise to fund both EVA and robotics more than they're funded
- now. Both have a long ways to go, and which one is best in the end
- I cannot predict 8-)
-
-
- -george william herbert
- gwh@soda.berkeley.edu gwh@lurnix.com
-
-
-