UW Bothell shoots for the stars

TrickFire Robotics club at NASA Mars robot competition. / contributed photos

By Zachary Nelson
Throughout history, across the globe, humans have looked up at the night sky and wondered. Now, a group of students at the 糖心vlog视频 have become an active part of humankind鈥檚 effort to explore space. Members in the TrickFire Robotics club have over the past year spent thousands of hours creating a robot that could rove across Mars and collect Martian dust from below the surface.

Club members designed, developed and manufactured the robot to compete in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration鈥檚 annual Robotic Mining Competition, which took place May 14-18 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. For the TrickFire Robotics team, being able to participate in this national event for the second year in a row was particularly rewarding. After all the work they put into the robot, they were excited to show it off this year to their peers and NASA scientists.

The students began designing the robot in August 2017. 鈥淲e got every single idea on the table. Club members鈥 ideas are valued in our club, no matter their major,鈥 said Ryan Berge, a Computer Science & Software Engineering (CSSE) major. 鈥淲e then used computer-aided design to shape the parts and make sure everything would fit where it was supposed to.鈥

Close-up of robot

After finalizing the design, students developed the software that executes the commands engineers give the robot, enabling it to 鈥渟ee鈥 what is in its way. 鈥淭his was crucial to make sure our robot could run autonomously. We hoped that it would learn to avoid debris in its path,鈥 said Adam Krpan, a CSSE major.

鈥淚 was so excited that we were able to be a part of this competition,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 imagined our robot on Mars.鈥

The club members are all grateful for the support they received from UW Bothell, especially during the manufacturing phase. 鈥淪ome days, we just wouldn鈥檛 go home because of how much work we were putting into the robot,鈥 said Levi Stoddard, a CSSE major. 鈥淭hat was OK with UW Bothell though. They gave us 24-hour passes to work in the campus Makerspace. You could find us working on campus through many long nights.鈥

UW Bothell gave the students more than just time and space.

鈥淭he school also let us use its fields as a testing ground for our robot, something that was extremely helpful once the manufacturing was done,鈥 said Berge.

The students also received funding that covered the majority of the needed materials and the cross-country trip. 鈥淲e sent 15 members to Florida for four days 鈥 and it only cost each of us $200 for the whole thing.鈥

The NASA competition brought together more than 50 college teams and more than 500 students. The UW Bothell students described it as more of a networking event, rather than just a competition. 鈥淓ven though we didn鈥檛 win, I was grateful to meet so many like-minded individuals,鈥 said Berge. 鈥淚t was an experience I will never forget.鈥

TrickFire's Mars robot for NASA competition

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