<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?xmlspysps C:\Program Files\Altova\AUTHENTIC\sps\template\TeachEngineering\lesson.sps?>
<lesson xmlns="http://www.teachengineering.org" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.teachengineering.org C:\PROGRA~1\Altova\AUTHENTIC\sps\template\TeachEngineering\lesson.xsd" xml:lang="en-US" version="1.0">
	<title>Red Rover Robotics</title>
	<header>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><image url="../cub_images/cub_mars_lesson02_image1.gif" description="A colorful cartoon of a robot zapping a soda can off the ground with a laser gun." horizontal_alignment="center" rights="Geoffrey Hill, University of Colorado, 2004."/></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</header>
	<grade realm="k12" target="7" lowerbound="6" upperbound="8"/>
	<lesson_number rank="2" total="6"/>
	<dependency>
		<link url="cub_mars_lesson01.xml" type="lesson">The Amazing Red Planet</link>
	</dependency>
	<time total="50" unit="minutes"/>
	<summary>This lesson will start with a brief history of robotics and explain how robots are beneficial to science and society. The lesson then will explore how robots have been used in recent space exploration efforts. The engineering design of the two Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, will be used as prime examples. Finally, the maneuverability of their robotic arms and the functionality of their tools will be discussed. </summary>
	<engineering_connection>In 2004, NASA engineers and scientists successfully landed two robotic rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, on Mars to explore the terrain and gather evidence to determine the planet&apos;s history. Engineers from several disciplines collaborated to achieve the complex task of designing and fabricating these two rovers. Electrical engineers designed and built the compact rover circuitry, mechanical engineers designed the body and arm, and computer engineers developed the rover programming and communication. </engineering_connection>
	<keywords>
		<keyword>Mars</keyword>
		<keyword>rover</keyword>
		<keyword>Spirit</keyword>
		<keyword>Opportunity</keyword>
		<keyword>design</keyword>
		<keyword>NASA</keyword>
		<keyword>exploration</keyword>
		<keyword>robot</keyword>
		<keyword>robotics</keyword>
	</keywords>
	<prerequisite_knowledge>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><link url="cub_mars_lesson01.xml" type="lesson">The Amazing Red Planet - Mars Overview</link></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</prerequisite_knowledge>
	<learning_objectives>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>After this lesson, students should be able to:</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Understand the need for robots in science and society.</text_element>
				<text_element>Explain how robots help us explore space.</text_element>
				<text_element>Know the importance of the cameras and tools of rovers.</text_element>
				<text_element>Recognize that science and engineering often depend on each other.  </text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</learning_objectives>
	<introduction>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Engineers have shown us that there are many benefits of using robots instead of humans. In an industrial sense, robots can perform tedious and complex jobs more efficiently and effectively than humans. They will never get tired or bored and, if properly maintained, will never get sick or need a break. Could you imagine working in a factory and welding the same joint or tightening the same screws a thousand times every day? Robots can be used in even more exciting and dangerous environments &#x2014; in place of humans. This includes the inside of volcanoes and caves, the depths of the ocean, and even in outer space and on other planets! In fact, robots can help in emergency situations: they can enter a building or structure to disable a bomb or verify damage or loss due to a natural disaster. Robots can be equipped with cameras, microscopes and various tools for identifying minerals and collecting specimens. Recently, engineers at NASA have landed two rover robots on Mars to explore the terrain and gather scientific evidence about the history of Mars.   </text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</introduction>
	<lesson_background>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>The first robot was introduced onstage in 1921 in Prague, Czech Republic, during a Karl Capek play entitled <italic>Rossum&apos;s Universal Robots</italic>. The theme of the play was robots controlling humans in society.  Originally, Capek wanted to call the robots &quot;labori&quot; but his brother Josef suggested the term &quot;robot&quot; which is derived from <italic>robota</italic>, a Czech term for forced labor or serf. Though at the time robots were a part of Capek&apos;s imagination, over the last century science and technology have made robots go from dream to reality.</text_element>
				<text_element><image url="../cub_images/cub_mars_lesson02_image2.jpg" description="A picture of the first robot used in Karl Capek&apos;s 1921 play, Rossum&apos;s Universal Robots." horizontal_alignment="center" rights="http://trueforce.com/images/Robot_History_Images/rur.jpg" caption="Figure 1. First robot used in Karl Capek&apos;s 1921 play, Rossum&apos;s Universal Robots."/><image url="../cub_images/cub_mars_lesson02_image3.jpg" description="Artwork of a Mars Rover on the surface of Mars." horizontal_alignment="center" rights="Copyright NASA, 2004." caption="Figure 2. Mars Rover"/></text_element>
				<text_element>In 1979, the Robot Institute of America defined a robot as &quot;a reprogrammable, multifunctional manipulator designed to move materials, parts, tools, or specialized devices through various programmed motions for the performance of a variety of tasks." According to Webster&apos;s Dictionary, a robot is defined as &quot;a machine that looks like a human being and performs various complex acts (as walking or talking) of a human being and a mechanism guided by automatic controls.&quot; However, the simplest way to refer to a robot is any machine that works on its own, after being programmed by a human. This means alarm clocks, copiers, or even toasters could be considered a robot. </text_element>
				<text_element>In <link url="cub_mars_lesson01.xml" type="lesson">Lesson 1</link>, we discussed why it is important to study the history and geology of Mars. Since, it would take months of supplies, food, and fuel just for the return trip home to send a human to Mars, NASA engineers decided to send rover robots to explore the terrain of Mars. The two most recent rovers that have successfully landed on Mars are named Spirit and Opportunity. </text_element>
				<text_element>(Note: The following background information is, in part, excerpted from NASA&apos;s Jet Propulsion Laboratory website, <link url="http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft_instru_rat.html" type="internet">http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft_instru_rat.html</link>.) </text_element>
				<text_element>Spirit and Opportunity have many parts that are analogous to the human body. According to NASA, each Mars rover has a body, brains, a neck, a head, eyes, an arm, and wheels and legs, among other parts and components. The body is used to protect their &quot;vital organs&quot; or electronics from the extreme temperatures of Mars. From day to night, temperatures can vary from 113 ºC (235 ºF) to -96 ºC (-140 ºF). The rover&apos;s brains are located inside of its body&#x2014;not its head, as with humans. The rover&apos;s brain comes in the form of computers, which are used to control all of the rover&apos;s motors, instruments, and communications between Earth and Mars. The neck and head of the rover are used to support two types of &quot;eyes&quot; or cameras: <italic>Pancams</italic> and <italic>Navcams</italic>. </text_element>
				<text_element><bold/><image url="../cub_images/cub_mars_lesson02_image4.jpg" description="Illustration of rover&apos;s arm." horizontal_alignment="left" rights="NASA 2004." caption="Figure 3. Robotic Arm" width="150"/><image url="../cub_images/cub_mars_lesson02_image5.jpg" description="Illustration of the four tools used at the end of the rover&apos;s arm." rights="NASA 2004." caption="Figure 4. Specifics of a robotic arm." width="150"/></text_element>
				<text_element>Pancams are used to collect a panoramic view of the Martian terrain. Navcams take black and white pictures to capture 3-D imagery of the surface. This information is then sent to the brains of the rover to help navigate the rover and avoid obstacles. There are also <italic>Hazcams</italic> (Hazardous Avoidance Cameras) placed on the front and back of the rovers also to prevent the rovers from crashing into any unexpected obstacles. The rovers operate off of batteries which are recharged from solar panels on top of the rover.</text_element>
				<text_element>Interestingly, the rovers only have one arm, but it has a wide range of motion and holds four different instruments to inspect and analyze the Martian terrain. Engineers designed the arm with <italic>five degrees of freedom</italic>&#x2014;which gives it such wide range of motion. A degree of freedom can be illustrated with joints of your body. Your elbows and knees have one degree of freedom because you can only move them forward or backward. Your wrist has three degrees of freedom because you can move your wrist up and down, side to side, and rotate it clockwise and counterclockwise. Therefore, five degrees of freedom means that the rover&apos;s arm can pretty much move in any direction/any degrees of range: up or down, front to back, side to side, side and up, front and down, etc.</text_element>
				<text_element>Once the arm is in place, the four instruments can analyze the surface of Mars. The <italic>Microscopic Imager </italic>is a combination of a microscope and a camera that provides small-scale features of rocks and soil. Its importance is to help understand the properties of the rocks and soils and to help identify if water existed on Mars. Since most of the rocks and soil on Mars contain iron, the<italic> Mössbauer Spectrometer </italic>was designed to investigate iron-bearing minerals and analyze their composition as well as magnetic properties. The <italic>Alpha Particle X-Ray Spectrometer</italic> (APXS) is designed to study x-rays emitted by the rocks and soils to determine their elemental chemistry. Both the Mössbauer Spectrometer and APXS take about 10-12 hours to take their measurements. The<italic> Rock Abrasion Tool</italic> (RAT) is a powerful grinder, and can create holes 2&quot; in diameter and .2&quot; deep. Once the hole is created, the other instruments can be used on the interior of the rock. This is important because the interior may be drastically different than the exterior and reveal how the rock was formed and the environmental conditions in which it was altered. </text_element>
				<text_element><italic> Fun Fact: The four tools at the end of the arm are considerably heavier than the arm itself. Engineers first had difficulty in controlling the arm and described it as maneuvering a bowling ball with a fishing rod. (<link url="http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft_rover_arm.html" type="internet">http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft_rover_arm.html</link>)</italic></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</lesson_background>
	<vocabulary>
		<definition word="Robota">A Czech term for forced labor or serf.</definition>
		<definition word="Robot">Any machine that works on its own, after being programmed by a human.</definition>
		<definition word="Rover">A vehicle sent to explore an unknown area.</definition>
		<definition word="Pancam">A camera mounted on the head of a rover to collect panoramic pictures.</definition>
		<definition word="Navcam">A camera mounted on the head of a rover to help navigate around obstacles.</definition>
		<definition word="Hazcam">A camera mounted on the front or back of a rover to prevent the rover from crashing into any unexpected obstacles.</definition>
		<definition word="Degree of Freedom">A direction of motion and its opposite in a joint or connection; either linear or rotational (e.g., up and down, left and right, clockwise and counterclockwise).</definition>
		<definition word="Microscopic Imager">A combination of microscope and camera that provides small-scale features of rocks and soils.</definition>
		<definition word="APXS">The Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer, designed to use x-rays to determine the elemental composition of rocks and soils.</definition>
		<definition word="Rock Abrasion Tool">A powerful grinder to create holes in rocks. </definition>
		<definition word="Mössbauer Spectrometer">An instrument designed to investigate iron-bearing minerals.</definition>
	</vocabulary>
	<child_documents>
		<link url="../../activities/cub_mars/cub_mars_lesson02_activity1.xml" type="activity" description="Students explore the difficult task of controlling a robotic arm in a fun and interesting way by experiencing the programmer and arm&apos;s point of view.">Strong-Arm Tactics</link>
	</child_documents>
	<lesson_closure>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>In <link url="cub_mars_lesson01.xml" type="lesson">Lesson 1</link>, we learned about the geology and history of Mars, and why we are interested in studying it. Scientists call on engineers to build a Mars Rover Robot to explore and investigate the Martian terrain to further the scientific and geological knowledge of the planet. Several disciplines of engineering had to come together to design the rover: mechanical engineers to design the body and arm of the rover, electrical engineers to build the compact circuitry, and computer engineers to create the programming and communications of the rover. It is important to remember the relationship between science and engineering, and how each area often times calls upon the other to help further the advancement of both. Now that we understand the design of the rover, <link url="cub_mars_lesson03.xml" type="lesson">Lesson 3</link> will discuss the manufacturing behind the rover and mission to Mars. </text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</lesson_closure>
	<summary_assessment>
		<text_section name="Pre-Lesson Assessment">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Discussion Question/Answer:</italic> Solicit, integrate, and summarize student responses.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Ask the students to define a robot. (Answer: Their answers will most likely describe a stereotypical robot: metal, looking like humans, machine-like, performing human tasks, running off of electricity and so on.) The question is designed to motivate students on thinking about how to define a robot.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Voting:</italic> Ask a true/false question and have students vote by holding thumbs up for true and thumbs down for false. Count the number of true and false, and write the number on the board. Give the right answer.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>With a show of hands and based on their previous definition, ask the students whether the following is a robot or not. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="ordered">
				<text_element>C3P0 and R2D2 from Star Wars. (True: they are machines programmed by humans to do human tasks.)</text_element>
				<text_element>Arnold Schwarzenegger as the Terminator. (True: he was a machine programmed by humans and could be rebuilt and was not affected by damage or pain.)</text_element>
				<text_element>Arnold Schwarzenegger as Governor of California. (False: he is a human who is working.)</text_element>
				<text_element>A toaster or microwave. (True: although they both are appliances, they should indeed be considered a simple type of robotic device.) This question will be revisited in the Lesson Summary Assessment to see if their answer for the last example changes.  </text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Post-Introduction Assessment">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Brainstorming:</italic> In small groups, have the students engage in open discussion. Remind students that no idea or suggestion is &quot;silly.&quot; All ideas should be respectfully heard. Ask the students:</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Ask the students to think of as many uses of robots that science and society utilize.  (Possible answers: Going into dangerous or unknown places: space, depths of the ocean, volcanoes, a building with a bomb, etc. Performing complex or tedious jobs: tightening screws, welding pieces together, assembling parts, painting, etc.)</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Discussion Question/Answer:</italic> Solicit, integrate, and summarize student responses.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Now ask the students &quot;why&quot; we use robots in these situations. (Possible answers: Going into dangerous or unknown places: to avoid risking human lives. Performing complex or tedious jobs: robots are faster, never need a break, and never get bored. )</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Lesson Summary Assessment">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Cartoon Character:</italic> Create a cartoon sketch of a situation, concept or thing.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Cartoon characters such as Bugs Bunny have often been sent into flight missions to escape a situation. Create your own cartoon sketch of a Mars robot. Your character could be in a lab, a spacecraft or on the surface of the planet. Make sure to label the degrees of freedom in your robot&apos;s movement as well as any other special tools your robot has for mars exploration. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Numbered Heads:</italic> Break the class up into teams of three to five. Have the students on each team pick numbers (or number off) so each member has a different number. Ask the students a question and give them a short time frame for solving it (~1 minute). The members of each team should work together to answer the question. Everyone on the team must know the answer. Call a number at random. Students with that number should raise their hands to give the answer. If not all the students with that number raise their hands, allow the teams to work a little longer. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Example Questions:</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="ordered">
				<text_element>Where did the term &quot;robot&quot; come from? (Answer: A 1920s play)</text_element>
				<text_element>What is the simplest definition of a robot? (Answer: a machine that works on its own, after being programmed by a human.)</text_element>
				<text_element>What were the names of the first two successful Mars Rovers? (Answer: Spirit and Opportunity)</text_element>
				<text_element>Which cameras help navigate the rovers? (Answer: Navcams)</text_element>
				<text_element>How many degrees of freedom does your wrist have? (Answer: Three: up/down, side/side, rotational)</text_element>
				<text_element>Why is the Rock Abrasion Tool an important instrument at the end of a rover&apos;s arm? (Answer: By creating a hole in a rock, the other instruments can analyze the interior of the rock. This gives information about how the rock was formed and what environmental conditions of the past altered it.)  </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Voting Revisited:</italic> Ask a true/false question and have students vote by holding thumbs up for true and thumbs down for false. Count the number of true and false, and write the number on the board. Give the right answer.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Revisit the voting questions in the Pre-Lesson Assessment. Based on the definition that robots are any machine that works on their own (after being programmed by a human), do the students change their response to the last question? They should agree that toasters and microwaves are in fact very simple forms of robots.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</summary_assessment>
	<extensions>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Robots and Shoes ─ To help give insight on the difficulty of robots performing simple tasks, have the students tie their shoes. Next, have the students tie their shoes again but this time wearing heavy gloves. Finally, tape craft sticks or tongue depressors to the gloves and have the students tie their shoes a third time. The students should notice it is harder to tie their shoes with the gloves and craft sticks. This activity helps simulate how robots function by limiting the amount of sensation or feeling that is signaled from the students&apos; hands to their brain while also limiting the range of motion within their fingers. </text_element>
				<text_element>Robot Movies ─ Have the students visit the following websites to see movies, 3-D views, and more on the Honda state of the art humanoid robots.   <link url="http://world.honda.com/ASIMO/P3/" type="internet">http://world.honda.com/ASIMO/P3/</link></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</extensions>
	<references>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft_surface_rover.html" type="internet">http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/spacecraft_surface_rover.html</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://www.foge.org/lesson_plans/materials/engineering_07a.pdf" type="internet">http://www.foge.org/lesson_plans/materials/engineering_07a.pdf</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://trueforce.com/Articles/Robot_History.htm" type="internet">http://trueforce.com/Articles/Robot_History.htm</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://www.sony.net/SonyInfo/News/Press/200011/00-057E2/" type="internet">http://www.sony.net/SonyInfo/News/Press/200011/00-057E2/</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://cache.ucr.edu/" type="internet">http://cache.ucr.edu/~currie/roboadam.htm</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://world.honda.com/ASIMO/P3/" type="internet">http://world.honda.com/ASIMO/P3/</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio/>
			<link url="http://jerz.setonhill.edu/resources/RUR/index.html" type="internet">http://jerz.setonhill.edu/resources/RUR/index.html</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio>RUR image:</reference_biblio>
			<link url="http://trueforce.com/images/Robot_History_Images/" type="internet">http://trueforce.com/images/Robot_History_Images/</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio>Webster&apos;s Dictionary online:</reference_biblio>
			<link url="http://www.m-w.com/dictionary.htm" type="internet">http://www.m-w.com/dictionary.htm</link>
		</reference>
	</references>
	<owner name="Integrated Teaching and Learning Program" organization="College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder"/>
	<contributors>
		<contributor name="Chris Yakacki"/>
		<contributor name="Geoffrey Hill"/>
		<contributor name="Daria Kotys-Schwartz"/>
		<contributor name="Malinda Schaefer Zarske"/>
		<contributor name="Janet Yowell"/>
	</contributors>
	<copyright owner="Regents of the University of Colorado." year="2004" desc="The contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government."/>
</lesson>
