ROMar 31

Long-Reach Robotic Cleaning for Lunar Solar Arrays

arXiv:2603.2924049.9h-index: 4
Predicted impact top 45% in RO · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for reliable robotic maintenance of lunar infrastructure like solar arrays to extend mission lifetimes, but it is incremental as it builds on prior vision-guided manipulation.

The paper tackles the problem of lunar dust accumulation degrading solar array performance by proposing a small mobile robot with a long-reach boom and compliant wrist for gentle cleaning, achieving preliminary results of maintaining approximately 2 N normal force with an RMS error of about 0.2 N in benchtop experiments.

Commercial lunar activity is accelerating the need for reliable surface infrastructure and routine operations to keep it functioning. Maintenance tasks such as inspection, cleaning, dust mitigation, and minor repair are essential to preserve performance and extend system life. A specific application is the cleaning of lunar solar arrays. Solar arrays are expected to provide substantial fraction of lunar surface power and operate for months to years, supplying continuous energy to landers, habitats, and surface assets, making sustained output mission-critical. However, over time lunar dust accumulates on these large solar arrays, which can rapidly degrade panel output and reduce mission lifetime. We propose a small mobile robot equipped with a long-reach, lightweight deployable boom and interchangeable cleaning tool to perform gentle cleaning over meter-scale workspaces with minimal human involvement. Building on prior vision-guided long-reach manipulation, we add a compliant wrist with distal force sensing and a velocity-based admittance controller to regulate stable contact during surface cleaning. In preliminary benchtop experiments on a planar surface, the system maintained approximately 2 N normal force while executing a simple cleaning motion over boom lengths from 0.3 m to 1.0 m, with RMS force error of approximately 0.2 N after initial contact. These early results suggest that deployable long-reach manipulators are a promising architecture for robotic maintenance of lunar infrastructure such as solar arrays, radiators, and optical surfaces.

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