Russia has built a space android to work in
orbit, its first space robot in more than two decades, Izvestia daily said on
Tuesday.
Russia has built a space android to work in
orbit, its first space robot in more than two decades, Izvestia daily said on
Tuesday.
The robot, S-400, can perform simple tasks
such as screwing bolts and searching the spacecraft for damage.
It will be sent to the International Space
Station (ISS) within two years' time, and will also be joining future missions
to the Moon and Mars, the paper said.
Cosmonaut Sergei Avdeyev said S-400's trip to
the ISS will be a "test" before "more interesting tasks."
Oleg Saprykin, a senior official at Russia's
space agency Roscosmos, said S-400 was the country's "first step towards a
robot cosmonaut."
"Manipulators were designed for [the
Soviet space shuttle] Buran and the Mir space station, but they did not get
into space in the end," Saprykin told Izvestia.
Andrei Nosov, an engineer at the firm which
made S-400, said the robot would be able to send tactile sensations to an
operator down on Earth.
"The operator can virtually touch the
surface… It is indescribable," Nosov said.
The United States has already launched an
android, Robonaut, to the ISS.
Japan and Germany are also planning to send androids in space.