Skip to main content
Logo GMV

Main navigation

  • Sectors
    • Icono espacio
      Space
    • Icono Aeronáutica
      Aeronautics
    • Icono Defensa y Seguridad
      Defense and Security
    • Icono Sistemas Inteligentes de Transporte
      Intelligent Transportation Systems
    • Icono Automoción
      Automotive
    • Icono Ciberseguridad
      Cybersecurity
    • Icono Servicios públicos Digitales
      Digital Public Services
    • Icono Sanidad
      Healthcare
    • Icono Industria
      Industry
    • Icono Financiero
      Financial
    • Icono Industria
      Services
    • All Sectors

    Highlight

    EMV Transit
    EMV Transit: technology that keeps on working
  • Talent
  • About GMV
    • Get to Know the Company
    • History
    • Management Team
    • Certifications
    • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Communication
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Magazine GMV News
    • Press Room
    • Media library
    • Latest from GMV

Secondary navigation

  • Products A-Z
  • GMV Global
    • Global (en)
    • Spain and LATAM (es - ca - en)
    • Germany (de - en)
    • Portugal (pt - en)
    • Poland (pl - en)
    • All branches and all GMV sites
  • Home
  • Communication
  • Press Room
  • Press Releases
Back
New search
Date
  • Robotic and Scientific Exploration

GMV Tests Lunar Rover at Unprecedented Speeds

12/07/2023
  • Print
Share

As is now tradition, a GMV space robot has returned to the Dehesa de Navalvillar to conduct tests for future lunar missions

RAPID is working to explore lunar terrain at never-before-reached speeds to aid future astronauts who will inhabit the surface of our natural satellite.

Rocks with specific mineral types, unique topographies, traces of moisture, and ancient streambeds are the research objectives for our small artificial guest, which will train it for future planetary exploration missions

np_022_rapid.jpg

During the first half of July the multinational technology company GMV is conducting field tests as part of RAPID (Robust and Semi-Autonomous Platform for Increased Distances), a space robotics project run by the European Space Agency (ESA). Dry runs are being carried out in open fields in the town of Colmenar Viejo, Madrid.

With more than 3,000 employees worldwide and its headquarters in Madrid (Spain), GMV develops systems and technology for various space applications. One of these systems includes robotic systems for planetary exploration (such as the Moon or Mars) and all the associated elements, including mobility, guidance/navigation systems, route planning through rugged terrains, and systems capable of carrying out its functions completely autonomously.

Space robotics has been identified by major European and global space players as a critical technology for the future of the industry. Both the European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Commission (EC) are funding multiple developments related to space robotics technologies, thanks to their potential reuse in complex terrestrial environments such as search and rescue, mining, nuclear power plants, and more.

In this context, as part of the RAPID project led by GMV for the European Space Agency (ESA), GMV is currently designing and developing a cutting-edge robotic platform, an autonomous rover capable of safely traversing lunar areas at an average speed of 1.1 m/s, a speed never before achieved on the surface of a distant planet by an autonomous robot, using a guidance, navigation, and control (GNC) system based on visual navigation, i.e. on images generated/acquired by cameras installed on the rover.

The Moon has been and continues to be the next step in human exploration. Water, along with other volatile and lunar materials such as regolith, metals, and rare earth elements (REE), present potential resources that can sustain human and robotic exploration sustainably on the Moon, the Solar System, and beyond. The lunar poles, in particular, are of great interest for exploration but present harsh environmental conditions with very low temperatures (below 30K/-243 degrees Celsius) and challenging lighting conditions.

In the project’s initial phase, the mission's terrain characteristics were defined, including planned traverse distances, types of obstacles, and the functional requirements of the components, as well as their operational and testing requirements.

Subsequently, GMV designed the RAPID mobile platform to meet the proposed requirements, particularly in terms of speed. This required improvements in all the subsystems involved: suspension, wheel characteristics, motors, power systems, as well as conducting several simulations of the rover's interaction with the ground to ensure it maintains contact, avoids slippage, and prevents tipping over during traverses.

Additionally, GMV has developed a semi-autonomous guidance, navigation, and control (GNC) subsystem with the main objective of achieving continuous driving, going beyond the current “stop-and-go” approach and avoiding stops during traverses. The main goal of this task has been to ensure that the GNC can drive the rover at the required speed, enabling much faster control cycles than traditional rovers. The project includes a control center to command the rover using different levels of autonomy, ranging from teleoperation to sending autonomous commands (e.g., autonomously going to a specific point).

Currently, GMV is conducting integration, preliminary, and field tests with the demonstrator in open fields, collecting performance parameters and test results. Rocks with specific mineral types, unique topographies, traces of moisture, and ancient streambeds are the research objectives for these tests, which will train it for future planetary exploration missions.

The initial RAPID tests are taking place in Dehesa de Navalvillar, Colmenar Viejo, Madrid, following all the instructions to ensure proper use and minimize impact in one of the natural environments most appreciated by the residents of the Sierra de Madrid for a dry run. 

Starting on July 17, the RAPID robotic platform will be tested in Cabanillas, Navarre, an area with topographical conditions similar to the landscapes the rover would encounter on the Moon and Mars.

In addition to the RAPID project, GMV is leading other space robotics projects as part of the ESA, such as the European Moon Rover System, or the European Commission's PERASPERA, which involves the development of the operating system for space robot control (ESROCOS project) and autonomy or artificial intelligence systems (ERGO project).

More info:
Corporate Marketing & Communications
[email protected] 

  • Print
Share

Related

20250508_rover_lunar-9.jpg
  • Robotic and Scientific Exploration
With LUPIN, GMV marks a new era in automated lunar exploration
bannerhome_gmv-news_92.jpg
  • Automation
  • Robotic and Scientific Exploration
Article: The new role of robotics in industry. A step toward the future of automation and sustainability
np_036-uk-quarry-trials2.jpg
  • Robotic and Scientific Exploration
GMV successfully completes the FASTNAV planetary exploration project

Contact

Alameda dos Oceanos, 115
1990-392 Lisbon, Portugal

Tel. +351 308801495
Fax. +351 213866493

Contact menu

  • Contact
  • GMV around the world

Blog

  • Blog

Sectors

Sectors menu

  • Space
  • Aeronautics
  • Defense and Security
  • Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • Automotive
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital Public Services
  • Healthcare
  • Industry
  • Financial
  • Services
  • Talent
  • About GMV
  • Shortcut to
    • Press Room
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Products A-Z
© 2025, GMV Innovating Solutions S.L.

Footer menu

  • Contact
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Footer Info

  • Commitment to the Environment
  • Financial Information