Updated
Updated · Gizmodo · Jun 10
JAXA Study Draws Lessons From 100-Minute SORA-Q Moon Mission
Updated
Updated · Gizmodo · Jun 10

JAXA Study Draws Lessons From 100-Minute SORA-Q Moon Mission

1 articles · Updated · Gizmodo · Jun 10

Summary

  • Science Robotics published results from SORA-Q’s January 2024 lunar mission, showing the 80-millimeter, 250-gram rover operated for 100 minutes and returned 12 high-resolution images before contact was lost.
  • The study says the tiny rover’s autonomous navigation, anomaly detection and self-recovery systems worked on the Moon, but some data was lost in transmission and communication likely ended when its battery ran low.
  • SORA-Q also helped diagnose JAXA’s SLIM lander after a thruster failure left it face down, capturing images that showed the lander’s solar arrays pointed the wrong way.
  • Researchers argue such ball-sized robots are best used alongside larger rovers, reaching tight vents, craters and other spaces bigger machines cannot access on the Moon or Mars.

Insights

How are lessons from the SORA-Q rover now shaping Japan’s next generation of robotic lunar explorers?
Can toy-inspired robots truly slash the astronomical costs of building a permanent human presence on the Moon?