Engineering:Front-end Robotics Enabling Near-term Demonstration
From HandWiki
The Front-end Robotics Enabling Near-term Demonstration (FREND, a play on friend) is a DARPA project "aiming to create a fully autonomous docking capability for satellites that weren't built to be serviced", currently under testing at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Spacecraft Engineering Department.[1]
The FREND mission concept uses robotic arms to position a grappling tool at a customer spacecraft structural hardpoint, and docks the two spacecraft together by first rigidizing this tool, then rigidizing the positioning robotics.[2] FREND has been described as a robotic manipulator technology "that someday could potentially deliver fuel, provide repairs, or reposition satellites."[3]
References
- ↑ "To Test A Satellite Dock, DARPA Built a 37-Ton Air Hockey Table". Gizmodo.com. 7 August 2012. https://gizmodo.com/5932150/to-test-a-satellite-dock-darpa-built-a-37+ton-air-hockey-table. Retrieved 2012-09-23.
- ↑ "FREND:Pushing the Envelope of Space Robotics". Nrl.navy.mil. http://www.nrl.navy.mil/content_images/08Space_Kelm.pdf. Retrieved 2012-09-23.
- ↑ Alfred W. McCoy, Beyond Bayonets and Battleships - Space Warfare and the Future of U.S. Global Power, Tom Dispatch, 2012-11-08
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Front-end Robotics Enabling Near-term Demonstration.
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