Designing Trustful Cooperation Ecosystems is Key to the New Space Exploration Era

February 08, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› 2024 IEEE/ACM 46th International Conference on Software Engineering: New Ideas and Emerging Results (ICSE-NIER)

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Authors Renan Lima Baima, LoΓ―ck Chovet, Johannes Sedlmeir, Gilbert Fridgen, Miguel Angel Olivares-Mendez arXiv ID 2402.06036 Category cs.RO: Robotics Cross-listed cs.CY, cs.MA, cs.NI, eess.SY Citations 3 Venue 2024 IEEE/ACM 46th International Conference on Software Engineering: New Ideas and Emerging Results (ICSE-NIER) Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
In the emerging space economy, autonomous robotic missions with specialized goals such as mapping and mining are gaining traction, with agencies and enterprises increasingly investing resources. Multirobot systems (MRS) research has provided many approaches to establish control and communication layers to facilitate collaboration from a technical perspective, such as granting more autonomy to heterogeneous robotic groups through auction-based interactions in mesh networks. However, stakeholders' competing economic interests often prevent them from cooperating within a proprietary ecosystem. Related work suggests that distributed ledger technology (DLT) might serve as a mechanism for enterprises to coordinate workflows and trade services to explore space resources through a transparent, reliable, non-proprietary digital platform. We challenge this perspective by pointing to the core technical weaknesses of blockchains, in particular, increased energy consumption, low throughput, and full transparency through redundancy. Our objective is to advance the discussion in a direction where the benefits of DLT from an economic perspective are weighted against the drawbacks from a technical perspective. We finally present a possible DLT-driven heterogeneous MRS for map exploration to study the opportunities for economic collaboration and competitiveness.
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