人-机器人合作空间探索

Anne-Sophie Martin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类一直仰望星空,梦想着将外太空作为最后的边疆。1957年苏联发射第一颗人造卫星“斯普特尼克号”和1969年人类首次登上月球是太空探索史上的重大任务。1972年,阿波罗17号标志着人类在月球表面的最后一个项目。尽管如此,已经有几艘机器人航天器前往月球,比如1976年的苏联月球24号,以及2019年的中国嫦娥四号,这是太空飞行器首次在月球背面着陆。国际航天界目前正在评估2024年重返月球的可能性,甚至更晚,在未来几十年里,人类将重返红色星球火星。机器人和漫游者(如好奇号、菲莱号、罗塞塔号和毅力号)将继续在太空探索中发挥重要作用,为未来在天体上的长期任务铺平道路。人类在火星或其他天体上着陆仍然是不可能的,因为从技术和生理的角度来看,有重大的挑战需要克服。因此,机器和人工智能的支持对于发展未来的深空计划以及实现可持续的太空探索至关重要。人们可以想象未来机器人和人类在月球表面或天体上合作进行科学研究,提取和分析可能就地利用的空间资源,以及建造人类居住和工作场所的情景。1967年《关于各国探索和利用包括月球和其他天体在内的外层空间活动所应遵守的原则的条约》第一条提到,自由探索与合作原则是国际空间法律框架的核心要素。在这种新的“机器人-人”合作的背景下,还需要考虑1972年《空间物体造成损害的国际责任公约》、1975年《射入外层空间物体登记公约》、1968年《营救宇航员、送回宇航员和归还射入外层空间物体协定》和1979年《关于各国在月球和其他天体上活动的协定》的规定。以及最近签署的一些关于未来月球任务的国际协议,因为它们对太空探索非常重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Human–Robotic Cooperative Space Exploration
Humans have always looked up at the stars and dreamed about outer space as the final frontier. The launch of the first artificial satellite—Sputnik—in 1957 by the Soviet Union and the first man on the Moon in 1969 represent significant missions in space exploration history. In 1972, Apollo 17 marked the last human program on the lunar surface. Nevertheless, several robotic spacecrafts have traveled to the Moon, such as the Soviet Luna 24 in 1976, and China’s Chang’e 4 in 2019, which was the first time a space vehicle touched down on the Moon’s far side. The international space community is currently assessing a return to the Moon in 2024 and even beyond, in the coming decades, toward the Red Planet, Mars. Robots and rovers (for example Curiosity, Philae, Rosetta, and Perseverance) will continue to play a major role in space exploration by paving the way for future long-duration missions on celestial bodies. It is still impossible to land humans on Mars or on other celestial bodies because there are significant challenges to overcome from technological and physiological perspectives. Therefore, the support of machines and artificial intelligence is essential for developing future deep space programs as well as to reach a sustainable space exploration. One can imagine a future scenario where robots and humans collaborate on the Moon’s surface or on celestial bodies to undertake scientific research, to extract and to analyze space resources for a possible in situ utilization, as well as to build sites for human habitation and work. The principles of free exploration and cooperation are core elements in the international space legal framework as mentioned in Article I of the 1967 Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, Including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies. In this context of new ‘robots–humans’ cooperation, it is also necessary to consider the provisions of the 1972 Convention on the International Liability for Damage Caused by Space Objects, the 1975 Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space, the 1968 Agreement of the Rescue of Astronauts, the Return of Astronauts and the Return of Objects Launched into Outer Space, and the 1979 Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, as well as some recent international agreements signed for future Moon missions given their significant importance for space exploration.
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