Close Menu
magazin Mehatronikamagazin Mehatronika
  • Srpski
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
    • SBCs
    • Development systems
    • Accessories
    • Tools
    • STEM
    • Music
    • Consumer technology
  • Forums
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Trending
  • Banana Pi CanMV-K230D-Zero review
  • Mehatronika interviews: Stefan Engleder
  • teenage engineering OP-XY review: after dark
  • Mehatronika interviews: Rodrigo Sim
  • LattePanda Mu i3-N305 review: More power
  • Raspberry Pi’s new storage options reviewed – Part 2: the Raspberry Pi SSD Kit
  • Raspberry Pi’s new storage options reviewed – Part 1: the SD cards
  • Raspberry Pi AI HAT+ (26 TOPS) review
  • English
    • Srpski
    • English
LinkedIn Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
magazin Mehatronikamagazin Mehatronika
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
    • SBCs
    • Development systems
    • Accessories
    • Tools
    • STEM
    • Music
    • Consumer technology
  • Forums
magazin Mehatronikamagazin Mehatronika
Home»News»Morphobots for Mars: Caltech Develops All-Terrain Robot as Candidate for NASA Mission
News

Morphobots for Mars: Caltech Develops All-Terrain Robot as Candidate for NASA Mission

By Marija Dakić08/31/2023Updated:09/08/20233 Mins Read

University unveils its NVIDIA Jetson-powered M4 Morphobot for search and rescue, delivery and possibilities that are out of this world.

Academics Mory Gharib and Alireza Ramezani in 2020 were spitballing a transforming robot that is now getting a shot at work that’s literally out of this world: NASA Mars Rover missions.

CalTech has unveiled its multi-talented robot that can fly, drive, walk and do eight permutations of motions through a combination of its skills. They call it the Multi-Modal Mobility Morphobot, or M4, which is enabled by the NVIDIA Jetson platform for edge AI and robotics.

“It grew in the number of functions that we wanted to do,” said Gharib, a professor of aeronautics and bioinspired engineering at Caltech. “When we proposed it to our design team, at first they all said, ‘no.’”

CalTech funded its initial research, and NASA and its Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) funded its next phase and brought in Ramezani, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Northeastern University, as a faculty researcher at JPL last summer to develop it further.

Its M42 version is now under development at NASA as a Mars Rover candidate and has interest from the U.S. Department of Transportation, Gharib said.

“At NASA, we’re being tested right now for transforming while landing,” he said.

And since recently releasing a paper on it in Nature Communications, Gharib says he’s been inundated with proposals.

“We’re kind of dizzy about how it suddenly got so much attention,” he said. “Different organizations want to do different things and are coming to approach us.”

Firefighting, Search and Rescue Operations

The CalTech team behind the paper — Gharib and Ramezani, as well as Eric Sihite, a postdoctoral scholar research associate in aerospace at Caltech; Arash Kalantari, from JPL; and Reza Nemovi, a design engineer at CAST — said the M4 is designed for diverse mission requirements in search and rescue, among other areas.

For example, when it’s not feasible to roll or walk into areas — like fire zones — it can fly and do reconnaissance to assess situations using its cameras and sensors.

According to Gharib, multiple fire departments in the Los Angeles area have contacted Gharib with interest in the M4 Morphobot.

“For first responders, this is huge because you need to land in a safe area and then drive into the situation,” he said.

Versatile Drone Deliveries to Get the Job Done

CalTech’s team also aims to solve complications with drone deliveries using the M4 Morphobot. Drone deliveries are the “low hanging fruit,” for this robot, said Gharib.

Traditional drones for deliveries are problematic because nobody wants drones landing near their home or business for safety reasons, he said. The M4 Morphobot can land somewhere isolated from people and then drive to finish deliveries, making it a safer option, he added.

The M4 can also fly into areas where truck deliveries might have a difficult time getting into or can’t offer delivery service at all.

“There are a lot of places where truck deliveries can’t go,” he said.

Right now, the M4 Morphobot is capable of traveling as fast as 40 mph, and its battery can last up to 30 minutes on a charge. But the team is working to design larger drones with longer flight times, bigger payloads and increased travel distances.

The sky’s the limit.

Learn more about the NVIDIA Jetson Nano at the following link

  • About
  • Latest Posts
Marija Dakić
Writer at magazin Mehatronika
Marija has been with magazin Mehatronika since the beginning, focusing on the publication's design and visual identity. Currently, she tracks down interesting news and other content for the site.

In free time she tends to her (many) plants and dabbles in interior design.
Latest posts by Marija Dakić (see all)
  • Morphobots for Mars: Caltech Develops All-Terrain Robot as Candidate for NASA Mission - 08/31/2023
NVIDIA
Previous ArticleFriendlyELEC NanoPi R6S review
Next Article Raspberry Pi 5 Review: The Fastest Pi Yet

Related posts

Mehatronika interviews: Stefan Engleder

06/10/2025

Mehatronika interviews: Rodrigo Sim

05/17/2025

NVIDIA Announces Project GR00T

03/21/2024

Staying in Sync: NVIDIA Combines Digital Twins With Real-Time AI for Industrial Automation

03/21/2024

magazin Mehatronika and NVIDIA support Pupin’s Challenge 2023

02/10/2024

Eureka: NVIDIA Research Breakthrough Puts New Spin on Robot Learning

10/27/2023
Brands
52Pi ABB Arturia ASBIS Banana Pi CADCAM Data CircuitMess Clockwork Pi Copa-Data DFRobot Digilent Eaton Elecfreaks Elecrow ELESA+GANTER Eurocom Fanuc FriendlyElec Intel LattePanda Lilygo Mersen miniWare Mixtile NumWorks NVIDIA Okuma Orange Pi Pickering Pine Microsystems Radxa Raspberry Pi Robotistan Samsung Schunk Seeed STMicroelectronics SunFounder teenage engineering TelitPower Wurth Elektronik Youyeetoo
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
  • Privacy policy
  • Editorial policy
  • Contact us
  • Media kit
  • Sending in review units

magazin Mehatronika - Agencija “Gomo Design”
Stanoja Glavaša 37, 26300 Vršac, Serbia
+381 60 0171 273

© 2025 magazin Mehatronika by Gomo Design.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

We use some minimal cookies to give you the best page experience. Please let us know if you're okay with this.AcceptPrivacy policy