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Alberta glacier used as NASA training ground for robotic snake that will explore outer space

Alberta glacier used as NASA training ground for robotic snake that will explore outer space

CBC
Sunday, November 26, 2023 01:07:44 PM UTC

A snake-like robot spent a few weeks in Jasper National Park this fall as its NASA handlers trained it for an future mission into outer space.

The Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor, also known as EELS, is a project developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). It spent a few weeks being tested at Athabasca Glacier, one of the biggest toes of the massive Columbia Icefield in Alberta. 

As its name conveys (exobiology means life outside of Earth; extant means still in existence), the robot will one day slither through other planets as it searches for evidence of life.

"Yes, it is a giant robotic snake," said Morgan Cable, the science lead of JPL's EELS robotics project. "In this case it's not just an acronym, but a backronym." That's when a descriptive phrase is made to conform to a name as an acronym. 

EELS is modular, with cylindrical sections that have their own rotating "screw-like" rings, said Cable. 

The team can manipulate the rings to change how EELS moves — for example, using them to grip on ice or mimic the natural movement of real snakes. The robot's movements include straightforward slithering, a screw-like motion and a sideways gait.

These different moves mean that EELS can push up against walls, navigating through challenging and hard-to-fit-into channels like ones on the Athabasca Glacier.

"It was really exciting," said Cable."We're finding that life may be in the hard-to-reach places, in cracks or crevices, maybe down in caves. Places where traditional Rovers can't go."

This is the second time EELS has been brought to the Athabasca Glacier. The glacier's natural cracks, crevasses and moulins — large, vertical well-like shafts — were used to test the robot's movement capabilities.

As the most-visited glacier in North America, the Athabasca is also eminently accessible, allowing for easy transport of heavy and often complicated pieces of the robot and prototypes to the field site. 

Over its three weeks in Jasper National Park this fall, the NASA team tested the robot's horizontal and vertical mobility, and the instruments used to map and sense minerals in these deeper spaces.

Word of the NASA mission quickly spread through town.

"Everyone was just so enthusiastic," Cable said. "It was so neat to see that the work that we do is more than just one institution, one country. Everyone is excited about this exploration."

There are no set plans for EELS right now but NASA is preparing the technology so it's ready when the right opportunity arises. At the top of the list is exploring one of the moons of Saturn.

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