My boss at the University of New South Wales, Professor Andrew Dempster, began organizing this forum several months ago. He simply realized that Australia’s world leadership in mining automation could be brought to a conference with space engineers, creating a dialogue about how we might mine the Moon and other planets. The two asteroid mining companies, Planetary Resources and Deep Space Industries, hadn’t even been announced when he started organizing.
A few weeks ago, we published a couple of small articles on
an online academic discussion site here in Australia, talking about the forum
and how Australia might make some technical contributions to this field. Evidently we struck a chord with the press and the public. In
the last five days, I’ve been interviewed on television five times (two were
live!) and at least that many times on radio. Andrew has done an equal number
of spots, and we’re not done yet. And here's an example of the print media coverage--fairly well informed and balanced.
We have some “space mining superstars” attending the
conference. Our keynote speaker is Rene Fradet, deputy director of the
engineering and science directorate at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Rene
was the flight system manager for the amazing Curiosity rover now crawling
around Mars. Earlier, at the head of his own company, he built Curiosity’s
amazing robotic arm. The attendees were in awe of the complexity and capability
built into Curiosity, and how it was all made to work together. In my
introductory talk, I used Curiosity as an example of the first step in mining—prospecting.
Also here is Dr. Laurent Sibille of the Kennedy Space
Center, a world expert in the properties of “moon dirt,” or Regolith. Laurent
and his colleagues are working on processing the regolith found on asteroids and the Moon. He
emphasized a common theme: using the resources we find out in space will change
the game. We will transition from isolated, one-way exploration missions to a
robust space infrastructure with greatly expanded economic productivity for all
of humanity.
Dr. Hijame Yano from ISAS/JAXA in Japan came to share his asteroid
geophysics research, which has benefited from his experience as part of the
first team to explore an asteroid. For 17 years, he was part of the remarkable
Hayabusa robot mission that explored asteroid Itokawa, and returned its sample
capsule to Earth in the Australian desert in 2010. Some of the most valuable
information from that mission was the very close-up photography of Itokawa’s
surface.
(JAXA)
Many of its features look similar to Earth’s—landslides, gravel beds,
boulder fields—but why should they be similar, given how much smaller the
asteroid’s gravity is? Hijame is actually starting an entire new field of
science—Microgravity Geology.
Honeybee Robotics is a small 50-person company that has
accomplished some amazing things. They built one of the tools at the end of
Curiosity’s arm, a small mechanized brush used for cleaning the surface of
rocks so the chemistry would be accurate. Dr. Kris Zacny represented Honeybee
here at the conference. Kris is a particularly appropriate speaker for this forum since, in addition to being a
“space guy,” he is also a highly experienced miner, with 10 years in South
Africa and other mining venues.
We got a good turnout from the Australian mining community,
too. The idea was to get some real-world, hard-won experience in Earth mining
projects. A speaker who bridged the gap between high technology and production
was Dr. Adrian Boeing of Transmin, the mining equipment company. Adrian talked
about the 13-year development of RockLogic, a highly automated rock breakingand processing system. Adrian performed a valuable service for the rest of us—he
taught us the steps that were necessary to address real-world mining issues in
the development of automated processes. One important point he made was that,
once automated systems were in place, the improvement in safety was dramatic. Automated systems also improved system "up time" by reducing human error.
Also presenting was my good friend Professor Behrokh
Khoshnevis of the University of Southern California. Behrokh defines the term
“innovator.” One of his most famous inventions is the Contour Crafting process—using
robots to do 3-D printing with concrete. This concept has tremendous
applicability on Earth, particularly in its potential for providing low-cost
housing for billions of the lowest income people on Earth. Behrokh came to the
forum to discuss his NASA-funded project studying how to do Contour Crafting on the Moon, an important idea for establishing permanent bases and robotic
factories.
Notice that a crucial technology and a common theme of these
presentations was the importance of robotics. Everyone at the conference
understood that off-Earth mining is a robotic process, not one done with
astronaut miners. And after a little explaining, even the press seemed to get
it!
At the end of the first day, conferees were treated to a
cruise on Sydney Harbour. The weather was absolutely perfect. Discussions
between miners, space geeks, roboticists and materials scientists continued
over wine and dinner on the boat deck.
This topic, and this conference, really have captured
people’s imaginations. During dinner on the cruise boat, my cell phone rang.
“Hello, this is BBC London.” My interview on World Update (minute 19 of the World Update link) was broadcast
throughout the UK and the US.
Rene Fradet generously agreed to give his talk a
second time, this time for a general audience instead of a bunch of
engineers. We’re using the largest venue on campus, 950 seats. Registration was
maxed out a week ago!
I'll post again after the conference concludes.
A fairly well-balanced article in the popular press:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/cosmic-quarries-a-new-frontier-for-mineral-exploration-20130220-2erm0.html