Engineering Magazine: Fall 2019

Page 6

FEATURE | NASA RESEARCH FOR EARTH AND BEYOND

HOME

Away from Home If we intend to explore the Moon or Mars, astronauts

system data? This is where AI comes in,” says Bergés. “We

need smart habitats that will support life and remain

have machines that learn by themselves if you give them

operational when they are vacant. To advance the design of

enough data, but we don’t have a lot of machines that can

autonomous systems for space habitats, NASA is funding a

reason by using existing engineering knowledge, which can

multi-university Space Technology Research Institute called

reduce the amount of data they need.”

Habitats Optimized for Missions of Exploration or more fittingly, HOME. Mario Bergés, associate professor of Civil and

To rein in the amount of data needed to detect equipment faults throughout the habitat, the team will collect electrical measurements. This data will be shared

Environmental Engineering (CEE), is leading the Carnegie

with robotic systems that will process it and act on the

Mellon University (CMU) research team working under the

physical environment, and in theory enable the habitat to

auspices of the center. Their task is to enable complete

maintain itself.

situational awareness in the habitat by providing it with

The CMU team is comprised of Bergés, an expert

capabilities to process and interpret its own data and make

in sensing and data analysis for infrastructure, and

decision recommendations that can be passed on to robotic

Burcu Akinci, a CEE professor and expert in information

systems or suggested to human occupants.

modeling. Rounding out the team is Stephen Smith and

“Space is harsh and errors can be catastrophic, so

Artur Dubrawski from CMU’s Robotics Institute, who will

we need autonomous systems that are very good,” says

lead research on machine learning and robotic systems.

Bergés. One idea the team is exploring is the application

CMU’s research will feed into other projects underway in

of artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze equipment data to

the institute.

understand electricity use in the habitat. If we know how

HOME is funded for five years for approximately $15

power is consumed, we could learn the status of all the

million, and NASA may apply recommendations spinning out

electric-powered systems in the habitat.

from the institute before the funding period ends. According

We have experience conducting data analysis for

to Bergés, CMU’s research could potentially inform the

equipment on Earth, but we have to learn how to translate

design of a gateway station that will orbit the Moon as part

this knowledge to the context of space and specifically to

of NASA’s deep-space exploration plans.

the systems in these habitats. For example, on Earth we have a variety of air-

Bergés believes that civil engineers will play a role in space exploration. “Since the beginning, civil engineers

conditioning systems, and we can figure out where potential

have been the stewards of the infrastructure that supports

faults are and how they happen. But in the new habitats,

modern life. If humanity is moving into space, it makes

all the systems will be one-offs. “How do you conduct

sense for civil engineers to be part of that.”

automated fault detection and diagnosis without a lot of


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