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Robots, Not Humans, Are The New Space Explorers

NASA/JPL-Caltech
This illustration shows NASA's Cassini above Saturn's northern hemisphere before making one of its "Grand Finale" dives.

When Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon 50 years ago, it was an inspiring moment for people around the world.

But another kind of explorer is responsible for much of the modern enthusiasm for space exploration.

“Since the days of Apollo, the greatest adventures in space have been these robots that have gone all over the solar system,” says Emily Lakdawalla, a self-described planetary evangelist at the Planetary Society.

By “these robots,” Lakdawalla means the various robotic probes that have flown past planets, moons and asteroids — orbiting some, landing on others.

Humans do still explore space. The International Space Station is a remarkable piece of hardware. Humans have been living on it for nearly two decades. But as amazing as the space station is, excitement about it is relatively modest.

Lakdawalla says sure, it would be inspiring to see an astronaut land on Mars, but in the meantime, inspiration is coming from NASA’s Mars rovers.

“It’s very easy to anthropomorphize them and imagine ourselves rolling across the surface of Mars,” she says. “It’s really not a stretch to imagine ourselves in the place of these robots exploring across the solar system.”

Millions of people around the world have watched with delight as the six-wheeled rovers have trundled across the Martian surface, snapping pictures and taking selfies.

A self-portrait of NASA’s Curiosity rover taken on Sol 2082. NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

At the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., Matthew Shindell says visitors make a point of coming to the planetary exhibit in a gallery tucked into the end of the west end of the museum.

Shindell is the museum’s planetary science curator. A prominent feature of the gallery is a large glass case containing versions of all the rovers that NASA has sent to Mars, from the tiny Sojourner rover that landed in 1997 to the 2,000-pound Curiosity rover that arrived in 2012.

The Sojourner rover’s Alpha Proton X-ray Spectrometer (APXS) is shown deployed against the rock “Moe” on Sol 64. NASA/JPL

“People love to come and see the rovers and really get a sense of what they look like up close and their actual scale,” Shindell says.

Mars has a mystique all its own, so perhaps it’s not surprising that people find exploring the red planet enticing. But the New Horizons fly-by of Pluto, the Messenger close encounter with Mercury, and Juno‘s buzzing over Jupiter’s poles all have generated great public interest.

Linda Elkins-Tanton of Arizona State University’s School of Earth and Space Exploration says the public’s appetite for space exploration goes beyond the familiar bits of the solar system.

This illustration shows NASA’s Cassini spacecraft in orbit around Saturn. Cassini made 22 orbits that swooped between the rings and the planet before ending its mission on Sept. 15, 2017, with a final plunge into Saturn. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Elkins-Tanton is lead scientist on a mission to a weird asteroid known as Psyche. It’s weird because Psyche is made entirely of metal — the only asteroid like that in our solar system. True, most people haven’t heard of Psyche, but Elkins-Tanton says when they learn about it, they’re hooked.

“We’re sending this probe to a place that is absolutely uninhabitable in an Earth kind of sense,” she says. “Yet the engagement we’re getting from the public already two years before launch is profound. It’s amazing people are so stimulated by thinking about something they’ve never imagined before that humans have never visited.”

Elkins-Tanton says she and her team are inviting the public to explore Psyche with them.

“We’re going to be sending the images that we get out onto the Internet for everyone in the world to see within a half-hour of our receiving them,” she says. “So everyone in the world is going to see this crazy world at the same time and we can all scratch our heads together.”

This idea of sharing the experience of space missions is something NASA has embraced. Lakdawalla says the public has been able to see the passion and commitment of the scientists who work on these robotic explorers.

Technicians at Astrotech’s payload processing facility in Titusville, Fla., watch vigilantly as NASA’s Juno spacecraft is tested for center of gravity, weighing and balancing on the rotation stand. NASA/Kim Shiflett

She points to the day NASA decided to end the Cassini mission to Saturn by sending the probe into the planet’s atmosphere, where it burned up.

“There were cameras on scientists and engineers who were weeping openly at the end of this spacecraft,” Lakdawalla recalls. “It really humanized the mission, and so it made that human connection that maybe in the past you only got through astronauts. Now you recognize that robotic exploration is human exploration. It’s just that the humans are back on Earth and the robots are going where humans can’t currently go.”
Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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