(^90) The Official Raspberry Pi Projects Book raspberrypi.org/magpi
hand reaches out to a shiny
gold box emblazoned with
the NASA logo. At the
press of a button, the connected
robotic arm springs into life,
lowering a blue Sharpie pen onto
a paper pad to draw the circular
outline of the famous logo,
then an inner ‘spacecraft orbit’
ellipse, before switching to a red
pen to sketch the red chevron
(magpi.cc/2zHatI7).
This is the Advanced Robotic
Manipulator System Tools and
Resources – or ‘ARM’ for short
- built and programmed by Dan
Gribok, a robotics intern at NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center within
the Satellite Servicing Projects
Division. Designed to be used at
outreach events to educate the
public in what NASA is doing with
robots, the Pi-powered ARM is a
versatile device that can also be
controlled manually using an Xbox
gamepad to pick up objects using a
hook or grabber.
Art for events
Dan tells us that the drawing
ability came about from a need
to have a constantly running
demonstration at events, such as
Awesome Con in Washington DC.
“So we wanted a demo where you
could just push a button, step back,
Projects SHOWCASE
With the ability to draw any shape, this robot arm is out of this world
> t can draw any I
shape using x-y
coordinates
> Dan took
around a year
to refine the
software
> The arm
can also be
controlled
manually
> It’s powered by
an original Pi 1
Model B
> A PCA9685
board drives
the arm’s
servos
Quick
Facts
Each pen is held loosely in a
tube, so the drawing pressure
is provided by gravity
NASA ARM
Components inside the
control box include an
original Pi 1 Model B
A The six-axis robotic arm is an upgrade from the previous
versions’ four-axis manipulator
DAN GRIBOK
A robotics intern at NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center, Dan is currently
pursuing a graduate degree in
Aerospace Engineering at UMD
focusing on Telerobotics and
Exoskeleton technology.
sspd.gsfc.nasa.gov
Left The manipulator arm tip can also
be equipped with a hook to pick up
blocks with loops attached