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An Agnostic End-Effector Alignment Controller for Robust Assembly of Modular Space Robots

Published: October 24, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.21164v1

By: Shamistan Karimov , Elian Neppel , Shreya Santra and more

Potential Business Impact:

Robots on the Moon move smoothly and safely.

Business Areas:
Embedded Systems Hardware, Science and Engineering, Software

Modular robots offer reconfigurability and fault tolerance essential for lunar missions, but require controllers that adapt safely to real-world disturbances. We build on our previous hardware-agnostic actuator synchronization in Motion Stack to develop a new controller enforcing adaptive velocity bounds via a dynamic hypersphere clamp. Using only real-time end-effector and target pose measurements, the controller adjusts its translational and rotational speed limits to ensure smooth, stable alignment without abrupt motions. We implemented two variants, a discrete, step-based version and a continuous, velocity-based version, and tested them on two MoonBot limbs in JAXA's lunar environment simulator. Field trials demonstrate that the step-based variant produces highly predictable, low-wobble motions, while the continuous variant converges more quickly and maintains millimeter-level positional accuracy, and both remain robust across limbs with differing mechanical imperfections and sensing noise (e.g., backlash and flex). These results highlight the flexibility and robustness of our robot-agnostic framework for autonomous self-assembly and reconfiguration under harsh conditions.

Country of Origin
🇯🇵 Japan

Page Count
6 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Robotics