AIAA Houston Dinner Meeting: Exploring The Solar System Through Low-Latency Telepresence (LLT)

Join AIAA Houston and Dan Adamo on a discussion on “Exploring The Solar System Through Low-Latency Telepresence (LLT)”

Why would it make sense to send humans more than 99% of the way to an off-Earth exploration destination like Mars without putting “boots on the ground”? How can average speeds achieved by robotic Mars rovers, typically a leisurely 0.4 meters per hour, be dramatically increased? This 1.5-hour lecture will answer these questions by suggesting humans operate in synergy with nearby robotic systems as a game-changing space exploration strategy. When command/feedback delays between human explorers and their robotic proxies are reduced sufficiently, today’s user interface technology can impart multi-sensory impressions of “being there”, a state of cognizance called low-latency telepresence (LLT). Using LLT-based strategies, impressive exploration productivity gains are realizable, together with reduced programmatic cost and risk, when compared to more conventional exploration strategies based on the Apollo Program circa 1970. These benefits accrue regardless of whether humans orbit above or loiter on/beneath a nearby exploration region.

See the flyer (PDF)

RSVP

RSVP below or on the Eventbrite page:

AIAA Houston Dinner Meeting: Exploring The Solar System Through Low-Latency Telepresence (LLT) and Houston Spaceport Frontier Lecture: Expanding Space

The AIAA Houston Section will have a dinner event with Dan Adamo next Thursday, January 31, 6pm, at Anita Gale’s residence!

See the flyer (PDF) for more details.

RSVP on the event page or on Eventbrite.

If you’re in the Rice University area next Thursday, 1/31, check out the Houston Spaceport Frontier Lecture: Expanding Space