Voyager, Icarus Robotics to test free-flying robot on space station

Space-tech firm Voyager Technologies and robotics startup Icarus Robotics have been contracted to demonstrate a free-flying robot on the International Space Station.

Space-tech firm Voyager Technologies and robotics startup Icarus Robotics have been contracted to demonstrate a free-flying robot on the International Space Station. (Brendan McDermid, Reuters)


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BENGALURU, India — Space-tech firm Voyager Technologies has secured a ​mission management contract with robotics startup Icarus Robotics to demonstrate a free-flying robotic system on the ‌International Space Station, the companies said on Monday.

NASA has been pushing for more ⁠private-sector activity in low ​Earth orbit ahead of the ⁠ISS's planned retirement in 2030 and robotics is emerging ‌as a key ‌technology for future commercial stations and lunar missions.

Icarus' "Joyride" system ⁠is designed to move ⁠inside crewed stations and the test is intended to evaluate how well it can operate in microgravity.

The mission will also play a key role in gathering data needed to train AI models to operate ‌robots in space.

Under the agreement, Voyager ​will get the robot ready for flight, secure safety approvals, arrange the launch and support operations once it reaches the space station.

"In order to create robust embodied AI systems, the first step is to get your hardware into the actual environment. Space has ​the highest barrier to entry of any domain; no simulator ‌can substitute for ‌being ⁠there," Jamie Palmer, co-founder and chief technology officer of Icarus Robotics, told Reuters.

Robots in space can be used to inspect and repair satellites, assist with routine maintenance ‌and logistics aboard space ​stations and eventually manage and ‌service data centers ⁠and other ​infrastructure in orbit.

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Akash Sriram

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