Many successful landings have been performed on celestial bodies such as Mars, the Moon, Venus and others. All of these had in common that they were designed such that they had to land in regions, which were supposedly free of any hazards or that a certain level of risk was accepted. However, while rocks and other geological features are nightmares of any landing engineer they are the dream targets of scientists. Therefore, currently landing-site selection is a trade-off between the scientists’ wishes and the engineers’ fears. To bring the engineering capabilities closer to what the scientists desire, landing capabilities need to be advanced. Therefore, this work tries to answer the research question: Are autonomous safe landings in hazardo...
©2004 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for a...
To date, Mars robotic landing site selection has been a compromise between scientific interest and s...
The Hazard Detection System (HDS) is a component of the ALHAT (Autonomous Landing and Hazard Avoidan...
Many successful landings have been performed on celestial bodies such as Mars, the Moon, Venus and o...
Many successful landings have been performed on celestial bodies such as Mars, the Moon, Venus and ...
Landing autonomously in hazardous environments is a very likely scenario for future exploration miss...
Future exploration strategies plan to land both human and robotics landers in scientifically interes...
AbstractLanding safety is the prior concern in planetary exploration missions. With the development ...
Until recently, robotic exploration missions to the Moon, Mars, and other solar system bodies relied...
To ensure successful future Mars landing missions, the lander must be capable of detecting hazards i...
Future space exploration missions on solar system bodies will require landing safely and precisely, ...
Unmanned planetary landers to date have landed "blind"; that is, without the benefit of on...
In this paper, the problem of determining safe regions of the visible terrain for autonomous spacecr...
Nowadays space exploration is moving further towards robotic missions with in situ analysis and plan...
Future exploration missions will take place in areas of high scientific interest, which often consis...
©2004 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for a...
To date, Mars robotic landing site selection has been a compromise between scientific interest and s...
The Hazard Detection System (HDS) is a component of the ALHAT (Autonomous Landing and Hazard Avoidan...
Many successful landings have been performed on celestial bodies such as Mars, the Moon, Venus and o...
Many successful landings have been performed on celestial bodies such as Mars, the Moon, Venus and ...
Landing autonomously in hazardous environments is a very likely scenario for future exploration miss...
Future exploration strategies plan to land both human and robotics landers in scientifically interes...
AbstractLanding safety is the prior concern in planetary exploration missions. With the development ...
Until recently, robotic exploration missions to the Moon, Mars, and other solar system bodies relied...
To ensure successful future Mars landing missions, the lander must be capable of detecting hazards i...
Future space exploration missions on solar system bodies will require landing safely and precisely, ...
Unmanned planetary landers to date have landed "blind"; that is, without the benefit of on...
In this paper, the problem of determining safe regions of the visible terrain for autonomous spacecr...
Nowadays space exploration is moving further towards robotic missions with in situ analysis and plan...
Future exploration missions will take place in areas of high scientific interest, which often consis...
©2004 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for a...
To date, Mars robotic landing site selection has been a compromise between scientific interest and s...
The Hazard Detection System (HDS) is a component of the ALHAT (Autonomous Landing and Hazard Avoidan...