ShadowNav: Crater-Based Localization for Nighttime and Permanently Shadowed Region Lunar Navigation
Abhishek Cauligi, R. Michael Swan, Masahiro Ono, Shreyansh, Daftry, John Elliott, Larry Matthies, Deegan Atha

TL;DR
This paper introduces a crater-based absolute localization method for lunar rovers operating in darkness, enabling long-distance autonomous navigation by matching crater edges detected via stereo vision with orbital maps.
Contribution
It presents a novel crater edge detection and matching approach for lunar localization at night, reducing reliance on ground-in-the-loop operations and improving navigation accuracy.
Findings
Achieves less than 10m localization error in simulated lunar night imagery.
Demonstrates effectiveness of stereo crater edge detection techniques.
Provides a scoring method for optimal crater match selection.
Abstract
There has been an increase in interest in missions that drive significantly longer distances per day than what has currently been performed. Further, some of these proposed missions require autonomous driving and absolute localization in darkness. For example, the Endurance A mission proposes to drive 1200km of its total traverse at night. The lack of natural light available during such missions limits what can be used as visual landmarks and the range at which landmarks can be observed. In order for planetary rovers to traverse long ranges, onboard absolute localization is critical to the ability of the rover to maintain its planned trajectory and avoid known hazardous regions. Currently, to accomplish absolute localization, a ground in the loop (GITL) operation is performed wherein a human operator matches local maps or images from onboard with orbital images and maps. This GITL…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Astro and Planetary Science · Robotics and Sensor-Based Localization
