An Agnostic End-Effector Alignment Controller for Robust Assembly of Modular Space Robots
By: Shamistan Karimov , Elian Neppel , Shreya Santra and more
Potential Business Impact:
Robots on the Moon move smoothly and safely.
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.
Similar Papers
Computational Design and Fabrication of Modular Robots with Untethered Control
Robotics
Robots change shape and move like animals.
Computational Design and Fabrication of Modular Robots with Untethered Control
Robotics
Robots change shape and move like living things.
Task and Joint Space Dual-Arm Compliant Control
Robotics
Makes robots move smoothly and precisely with people.