What I’m curious about is the “engineering model.”
All NASA missions have duplicate probes, satellites, rovers, here on earth. They’re essential for testing various scenarios like training astronauts (in the case of the Hubble repair missions), or testing the limits of the systems in question. I wonder if the engineering model for Curiosity has one of its wheels cut away in the same pattern, to simulate difficulties in navigation and traction?
What I’m curious about is the “engineering model.”
All NASA missions have duplicate probes, satellites, rovers, here on earth. They’re essential for testing various scenarios like training astronauts (in the case of the Hubble repair missions), or testing the limits of the systems in question. I wonder if the engineering model for Curiosity has one of its wheels cut away in the same pattern, to simulate difficulties in navigation and traction?
Maybe that’s why the took the photo of the wheel?
Now that you mention it, that’s probably why.
iirc, they did use a damaged wheel to try to figure out a situation where a rover was stuck, though I don’t remember any details about it.