NASA JSC has been involved in the development of Laser sensors for the past ten years in order to support future rendezvous and docking missions, both manned and unmanned. Although many candidate technologies have been breadboarded and evaluated, no sensor hardware designed specifically for rendezvous and docking applications has been demonstrated on-orbit. It has become apparent that representative sensors need to be flown and demonstrated as soon as possible, with minimal cost, to provide the capability of the technology in meeting NASA's future AR&C applications. Technology and commercial component reliability have progressed to where it is now feasible to fly hardware as a detailed test objective minimizing the overall cost and developm...
NASA has recently re-confirmed their interest in autonomous systems as an enabling technology for fu...
Design and fabricate test hardware for NASA's George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) are repo...
The international space station (SS) must take advantage of advanced telerobotics in order to maximi...
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) has developed and tested an engineering model of an automat...
Technology for manned space flight is mature and has an extensive history of the use of man-in-the-l...
Rockwell International is conducting an ongoing program to develop Laser Docking Sensors (LDS) that ...
Electro-optical sensors provide unique and critical functionality for space missions requiring rende...
This paper will describe the technology development efforts NASA has underway for Automated Rendezvo...
The first autonomous rendezvous and docking in the history of the U.S. Space Program was successfull...
An autodock was demonstrated using straightforward techniques and real sensor hardware. A simulation...
The NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC) is involved in the development of an autonomous docking ground d...
A spaceborne LADAR sensor, which will meet the requirements for rendezvous and docking with a cooper...
This paper will address how a common Automated Rendezvous and Docking/Capture (AR&D/C) sensor suite ...
The Next Generation Advanced Video Guidance Sensor (NGAVGS) has been under development for the last ...
The Optical Communication and Sensor Demonstration Program was one of three projects selected by the...
NASA has recently re-confirmed their interest in autonomous systems as an enabling technology for fu...
Design and fabricate test hardware for NASA's George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) are repo...
The international space station (SS) must take advantage of advanced telerobotics in order to maximi...
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) has developed and tested an engineering model of an automat...
Technology for manned space flight is mature and has an extensive history of the use of man-in-the-l...
Rockwell International is conducting an ongoing program to develop Laser Docking Sensors (LDS) that ...
Electro-optical sensors provide unique and critical functionality for space missions requiring rende...
This paper will describe the technology development efforts NASA has underway for Automated Rendezvo...
The first autonomous rendezvous and docking in the history of the U.S. Space Program was successfull...
An autodock was demonstrated using straightforward techniques and real sensor hardware. A simulation...
The NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC) is involved in the development of an autonomous docking ground d...
A spaceborne LADAR sensor, which will meet the requirements for rendezvous and docking with a cooper...
This paper will address how a common Automated Rendezvous and Docking/Capture (AR&D/C) sensor suite ...
The Next Generation Advanced Video Guidance Sensor (NGAVGS) has been under development for the last ...
The Optical Communication and Sensor Demonstration Program was one of three projects selected by the...
NASA has recently re-confirmed their interest in autonomous systems as an enabling technology for fu...
Design and fabricate test hardware for NASA's George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) are repo...
The international space station (SS) must take advantage of advanced telerobotics in order to maximi...