2016 IEEE Aerospace Conference 2016
DOI: 10.1109/aero.2016.7500643
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PLRP-3: Operational perspectives conducting science-driven extravehicular activity with communications latency

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Cited by 11 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…During the mission, the study team consistently applied a set of field-tested evaluation techniques that use surveys of acceptability, capability assessment, and simulation quality ratings [7,8,[10][11][12][14][15][16][17]. The surveys included individual and consensus ratings by the EV crew, IV crew, and ST team.…”
Section: Subjective Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the mission, the study team consistently applied a set of field-tested evaluation techniques that use surveys of acceptability, capability assessment, and simulation quality ratings [7,8,[10][11][12][14][15][16][17]. The surveys included individual and consensus ratings by the EV crew, IV crew, and ST team.…”
Section: Subjective Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High-resolution still imagery was found to be more useful scientifically than video footage streaming from EV crewmember helmet cameras, although these video feeds were important for operational SA. Finally, PLRP reaffirmed, under real scientific exploration, the importance of two IV crewmembers , with one primarily focused on operations and the other on science, as well as the need for enabling dynamic flexibility within the EVA to best enable science (Miller et al , 2016b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Desert Research and Technology Studies (DRATS) (Eppler, 2013; Gruener et al, 2013; Ross et al, 2013; Yingst et al, 2013) and the Pavilion Lake Research Project (PLRP) both incorporated an intra-EVA science support team, the former working without communication latency. PLRP utilized a one-way light time (OWLT) communication latency of 5 min (10 min round-trip), which was found to strain the science team's ability to tactically acquire, process, and provide directions from the ground, particularly when the scientific objectives of the EVA were survey, representative in nature, as opposed to precise, instrument-data driven (Miller et al, 2016). Such findings led to the concepts of operations (ConOps) design used at NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO) (Chappell et al, 2017) and Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains (BASALT) (Beaton et al, 2017), the latter being the setting for this study.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The operational concepts applied during the BASALT deployments were based on current mission architectures for Mars human exploration as well as best practices derived from other analog research program results (Lim et al, 2011; Abercromby et al, 2013; Chappell et al, 2013; Eppler, 2013; Yingst et al, 2013; Miller et al, 2016) and were designed to allow the SST to tactically react to events during intra-EVA periods (Beaton et al, 2019a). EVAs were divided into five distinct phases (with some representative times): (1) approach (1 h); (2) contextual survey (10 min); (3) sample location search (1 h) (2 and 3 merged in 2017 deployment); (4) presampling survey (1 h); and (5) sampling (50 min).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%