Nasa Robot Developed to Explore Extraterrestrial Volcanoes

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 8 January 2015 13:12 IST
Nasa has developed a robot that is enabling researchers to put together a 3D map of a fissure - a crack that erupts magma - that is now inactive on Hawaii's Kilauea volcano.

The research has several implications for the study of extraterrestrial volcanoes.

On both Earth and Mars, fissures are the most common physical features from which magma erupts.

"This is probably also true for the previously active volcanoes on the moon, Mercury, Enceladus and Europa, although the mechanism of volcanic eruption - whether past or present - on these other planetary bodies is unknown," said Carolyn Parcheta, postdoctoral fellow at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) who worked with the robot called VolcanoBot 1 in Hawaii in May 2014.

Advertisement

While VolcanoBot 1 was tested at Kilauea volcano in Hawaii, a lighter, smaller VolcanoBot 2 will be tested this year.

Parcheta and her co-advisor Aaron Parness, robotics researcher at JPL, are developing robots that can get into crevices where humans would not be able to go, gaining new insights about these wondrous geological features.

"We do not know exactly how volcanoes erupt. We have models but they are all very, very simplified. This project aims to help make those models more realistic," Parcheta noted.

Advertisement

VolcanoBot 1 was able to descend to depths of 82 feet in two locations on the fissure, although it could have gone deeper with a longer tether, as the bottom was not reached on either descent.

"In order to eventually understand how to predict eruptions and conduct hazard assessments, we need to understand how the magma is coming out of the ground. This is the first time we have been able to measure it directly, from the inside, to centimeter-scale accuracy," Parcheta pointed out.

Advertisement

The team plans to test VolcanoBot 2 at Kilauea in early March this year.

 

Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.

Further reading: Nasa, Robots, VolcanoBot 1, VolcanoBot 2
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Arc Raiders Will Get Multiple New Maps This Year, Says Embark
  2. Oakley Meta HSTN Smart Glasses Review
  3. Realme Neo 8 Key Specifications Confirmed Ahead of January 22 Launch
  4. Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Colourways Spotted in Leaked SIM Tray Images
  5. Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 May Sport a Smaller Crease Using This Technology
  6. Motorola to Launch New Moto Watch in India on This Date
  7. Honor Magic 8 Pro Air, Magic 8 RSR Porsche Design Launched At These Prices
  8. Terminally Ill Fan May Be Able to Play GTA 6 Ahead of Release
  9. Sarvam Maya OTT Release: Know Everything About This Malayalam Fantasy Drama Film
  10. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale: Best Deals on Printers Under Rs. 10,000
  1. Global RAM Shortage Is Reportedly Causing GPU, Storage Drive Prices to Skyrocket
  2. Viruses and Bacteria Evolve Differently in Space, ISS Study Finds
  3. Rockstar Games Said to Have Granted a Terminally Ill Fan's Wish to Play GTA 6
  4. Oppo K15 Turbo Series Tipped to Feature Built-in Cooling Fans; Oppo K15 Pro Model Said to Get MediaTek Chipset
  5. Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Said to Feature Dual Ultra-Thin Glass OLED Panel to Reduce Crease Visibility
  6. Honor Magic 8 Pro Air Launched Alongside Honor Magic 8 RSR Porsche Design: Price, Specifications
  7. Realme Neo 8 Key Specifications Including 8,000mAh Battery, Ultrasonic Fingerprint Sensor Confirmed
  8. Astronomers Find Massive Iron-Rich Feature Lurking Under the Ring Nebula
  9. Asus Reportedly Halts Smartphone Launches ‘Temporarily’ to Focus on AI Robots, Smart Glasses
  10. JioHotstar Announces Monthly Subscription Plans Across Mobile, Super, and Premium Tiers
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.