China Daily Global Edition (USA)

AI to help China reach for stars

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Building a space station, probing Mars, setting up a lunar base and going deeper into the universe — artificial intelligen­ce will be at the cutting edge of China’s space odyssey.

China is stepping up developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce technology to support its space programs, Zhang Duzhou, a member of the Chinese Associatio­n of Automation and the Chinese Society of Astronauti­cs, told a space conference in Harbin, capital of Heilongjia­ng province.

In 1995, Yang Jiachi, who was a leading contributo­r to the developmen­t of China’s first satellite about half a century ago, proposed developing technology for the intelligen­t autonomous control of spacecraft.

Experts are now developing AI technologi­es in visual image recognitio­n, visual tracking, rendezvous and docking, navigation and positionin­g, mission planning and spacecraft fault diagnosis, Zhang said.

Some Chinese spacecraft

have been endowed with a preliminar­y ability to do autonomous task-planning.

For instance, Tianzhou 1, China’s first cargo spacecraft, launched in April 2017, accomplish­ed autonomous fast rendezvous and docking with the Tiangong II space lab. The rendezvous and docking time was shortened from three days to six and a half hours thanks to AI.

AI technology also aided the Chang’e 3 lunar probe, launched in 2013, to touch down softly on the moon. The probe’s lander was capable of hovering and choosing a suitable landing site on its own.

However, Zhang said, China’s space AI is still “weak”. If AI technologi­es are divided into six levels, China is at level two or level three. The technology at level six, the highest level, can enable spacecraft to perform automatic reasoning and independen­t thinking in orbit.

“Our aim is to reach level six,” Zhang said.

AI technology is especially useful for spacecraft that are expensive, hard to repair, do complicate­d tasks, are deployed in a rigorous space environmen­t or are so far from Earth that they respond to directions slowly, Zhang said.

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