Team2020
Manipal, August, 25,
2020.
Mars Rover Manipal
(MRM), a student rover design team from Manipal Institute of Technology,
Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), powered by Mouser Electronics and
SICK Sensor Intelligence, has bagged the 1st place in the first edition of the
Indian Rover Design Challenge (IRDC 2020).
The first edition of the
Indian Rover Design Challenge (IRDC) was organized by the Mars Society South
Asia (MSSA) this year. MSSA is the official chapter of The Mars Society for the
South Asian region. The Mars Society is the world's largest, most influential
space advocacy organization dedicated to the human exploration and settlement
of Mars.
The IRDC, an online
competition for university students challenges them to design Mars rovers which
are fully equipped and mission-ready for actual operations on Mars. Students
are encouraged to be as imaginative, creative and insightful as possible within
practical implementable limits for the human race.
The teams had to submit
an Engineering Design Review (EDR) within a set time frame. The competition
took place during June-July 2020, and 28 teams from 7 countries (India, USA,
Poland, Italy, Singapore, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh) participated. It included
teams from well-renowned universities like the University of Michigan, National
University of Singapore, Warsaw University of Technology, Indian Institute of
Technology, and National Institute of Technology.
The 30-member team
comprising of 2nd and 3rd year engineering
students from Manipal Institute of Technology (MIT) designed rover parts
keeping in mind the various factors that would be different on Mars. The teams
are supposed to carefully plan each subsystem of the rover, considering various
extra-terrestrial conditions and parameters in the design. The teams were
judged on three main categories: Innovation, Effectiveness of their solutions,
and the Research parameters they considered before proposing a solution. The
three parameters carried equal weightage and the teams that came up with the
best solutions to the problem statement, keeping in mind the limitations of the
Martian surface, were awarded maximum points. The independent subsystems like
the Drive Systems of the rover (Suspension and Wheels), Science Payload and
Rover Control Algorithms (Navigation and Robotics Manipulator Control) were
prioritized for assessment.
The result was announced
on 15th August 2020 by Dr Robert Zubrin, the Founder and President of The Mars
Society, USA. MRM scored 816.5 points for the submission, securing the first
position by a margin of 15 points.
The team would like to
thank Manipal Institute of Technology, Manipal Academy of Higher Education and
its Sponsors for giving team MRM the opportunity and the necessary resources to
compete and receive accolades in this competition.