How Japanese scientists sent a real-life Transformer to the moon
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Japanese scientists successfully deployed a miniature transforming rover, SORA-Q, on the lunar surface as part of the Smart Lander for Investigating moon (SLIM) mission. SORA-Q, developed by JAXA, Sony, Doshisha University, and Takara-TOMY, demonstrated autonomous navigation and wireless communication with another lander, relaying data back to Earth. The rover, designed to pave the way for miniature autonomous lunar robots, transformed from a sphere into a two-wheeled rover and took color images of the lunar environment.
💡 Why It Matters
- · The success of SORA-Q highlights the potential of small, autonomous robots to access environments beyond the reach of primary large spacecraft, offering a cost-effective solution for lunar exploration.
- · By leveraging technology from toy design, scientists have created a compact, yet capable, rover that can navigate and communicate on the lunar surface.