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Ex Terra: The Journal of Space Commerce
Tom Patton
123 episodes
4 months ago
This podcast focuses on issues related to the commercial space industry, and the impacts for people on Earth
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Business
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This podcast focuses on issues related to the commercial space industry, and the impacts for people on Earth
Show more...
Business
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Automating Spacecraft Interactions: The Ex Terra Podcast
Ex Terra: The Journal of Space Commerce
29 minutes 20 seconds
1 year ago
Automating Spacecraft Interactions: The Ex Terra Podcast

On this edition of The Ex Terra Podcast, Tom Patton talks with Kevin Stadnyk, co-founder and CEO of Obruta Space Solutions.

Obruta Space Solutions is a Canadian company specializing in space robotics and technologies. Their mission revolves around enabling satellite servicing and addressing the challenges of space debris removal. The company does not build hardware for those tasks, but rather develops the software that will eventually allow such spacecraft to operate autonomously.

The company is developing a rendezvous, proximity operations, and docking (RPOD) system. With this "RPOD Kit", Obruta enables orbital service providers to perform services such as on-orbit refueling, life-extension, and debris removal—services which exponentially increase a space asset's value. Astronauts aboard the International Space Station are currently conducting ROPD experiments in preparation for free-flying test in the future

"There will be humans in the loop for the initial and foreseeable future in some capacity," Stadnyk said. "Similar to self-driving cars, the end goal is reaching full autonomy, but we know that it's not realistic to start this whole technology by being fully autonomous. It's just won't be safe enough, it won't be reliable enough."

Kevin holds two degrees in aerospace engineering and a background focused on satellite attitude control, orbital mechanics, and space debris removal technologies.

Ex Terra: The Journal of Space Commerce
This podcast focuses on issues related to the commercial space industry, and the impacts for people on Earth