Robotic spacecraft or uncrewed spacecraft are spacecraft without people on board. Uncrewed spacecraft may have varying levels of autonomy from human input; they may be remote controlled, remote guided or autonomous: they have a pre-programmed list of operations, which they will execute unless otherwise instructed. A robotic spacecraft for scientific measurements is often called a space probe or space observatory.
Many space missions are more suited to telerobotic rather than crewed operation, due to lower cost and risk factors. In addition, some planetary destinations such as Venus or the vicinity of Jupiter are too hostile for human survival, given current technology. Outer planets such as Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are too distant to reach with current crewed spaceflight technology, so telerobotic probes are the only way to explore them. Telerobotics also allows exploration of regions that are vulnerable to contamination by Earth micro-organisms since spacecraft can be sterilized. Humans can not be sterilized in the same way as a spaceship, as they coexist with numerous micro-organisms, and these micro-organisms are also hard to contain within a spaceship or spacesuit.
The first uncrewed space mission was Sputnik, launched October 4, 1957 to orbit the Earth. Nearly all satellites, landers and rovers are robotic spacecraft. Not every uncrewed spacecraft is a robotic spacecraft; for example, a reflector ball is a non-robotic uncrewed spacecraft. Space missions where other animals but no humans are on-board are called uncrewed missions.
Many habitable spacecraft also have varying levels of robotic features. For example, the space stations Salyut 7 and Mir, and the International Space Station module Zarya, were capable of remote guided station-keeping and docking maneuvers with both resupply craft and new modules. Uncrewed resupply spacecraft are increasingly used for crewed space stations.
The first robotic spacecraft was launched by the Soviet Union (USSR) on 22 July 1951, a suborbital flight carrying two dogs Dezik and Tsygan.
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L'Observatoire de Jodrell Bank (, à l'origine la Jodrell Bank Experimental Station puis, de 1966 à 1999, les Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratories) est un observatoire de radioastronomie dépendant de l'Université de Manchester. Il est situé près de Goostrey, dans le Cheshire, dans le nord-ouest de l'Angleterre. Le nom de « Jodrell Bank » vient du nom du terrain sur lequel a été érigé l'observatoire. Jodrell est le nom du propriétaire terrien à l'époque et bank désigne une rive en anglais. L'observatoire est fondé en 1945.
vignette|Lancement du Saturn V, lanceur du programme Apollo, projet emblématique de la NASA. La National Aeronautics and Space Administration (en français : « Administration nationale de l'aéronautique et de l'espace »), plus connue sous son acronyme NASA, est l'agence fédérale responsable de la majeure partie du programme spatial civil des États-Unis. La recherche aéronautique relève également du domaine de la NASA. Depuis sa création le , la NASA joue mondialement un rôle dominant dans le domaine du vol spatial habité, de l'exploration du Système solaire et de la recherche spatiale.
Luna 9 (appelée aussi Lunik 9 ou Objet 01954) est une sonde spatiale soviétique du programme Luna, lancée en , qui a réussi le le premier atterrissage en douceur sur la Lune. Luna 9 fait partie du programme Luna, qui comprend plus d'une quarantaine de missions robotiques lancées entre 1959 et 1976 par l’Union soviétique pour étudier la Lune. Les objectifs du programme sont en partie dictés par des considérations politiques : la course à l'espace qui oppose Soviétiques et Américains vise à démontrer la supériorité du savoir-faire de chaque pays, et à travers celui-ci, du régime politique.
The main objective of the course is to learn to apply the fundamentals of space system engineering & design. The course introduces the various phases, systems, & subsystems involved in the design of s
The main objective of this course is to teach the students the fundamentals of concurrent engineering for space missions and systems. The course is built around a similar framework to that of the Euro
The objective of the course is to present with different viewpoints, the lessons learned which lead to the decisions in the space exploration and their consequences today and for the decades to come.
Couvre le télescope spatial James Webb, lancé en 2021 pour étudier les objets éloignés et les exoplanètes d'une orbite halo autour du point L2 Lagrange.
The impact of daylighting strategies on a building’s carbon emissions have so far been assessed mostly based on the building’s use phase and their resulting operational benefits, overlooking embodied carbon emissions of material production, construction, m ...
2021
This thesis presents the feasibility analysis and preliminary design of a new Lunar Reconnaissance Drone. The system’s objective, which is composed of the drone and a service station, is to assist a large-scale rover mission into low-light zones of the Moo ...
2022
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In this brief, the nanosatellite rendezvous and docking problem is tackled. It was never attempted for small spacecraft, as critical technologies, such as six-degree-of-freedom (DoF) micropropulsion systems, have only recently become available due to advan ...