Abstract

Ocean Worlds such as Europa and Enceladus are known to harbor subsurface liquid water oceans under their icy crust and are high-priority targets for in situ exploration. Compared to the Moon and Mars, Ocean Worlds likely present a significantly more challenging environment for surface mobility systems due to the extremely cold temperature, high radiation dosage, and poorly constrained material properties under these conditions. Small-diameter wheels such as those used by Mars rovers are prone to slip-sinkage in loose soil and damage from sharp rock and ice formations. A 4-wheel rover with a simple drive system and large deployable compliant tires is proposed as a solution for extreme terrain mobility on Ocean World surfaces. The present work describes the design and construction of a single wheel test rig and a prototype large-diameter deployable wheel for Ocean World rovers and initial test results. The test rig allows independent control of the vertical load, slip ratio, slip angle, and camber angle, and accommodates large-diameter deployable wheels. The test rig features a modular test bed that can simulate varied surface features such as fine-grained ice, smooth hard ice, sharp ice formations, and large ice boulder fields.

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