TY - JOUR
T1 - Rutting Caused by Grouser Wheel of Planetary Rover in Single-Wheel Testbed
T2 - LiDAR Topographic Scanning and Analysis
AU - Takehana, Keisuke
AU - Ares, Vinicius Emanoel
AU - Santra, Shreya
AU - Uno, Kentaro
AU - Rohmer, Eric
AU - Yoshida, Kazuya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - This paper presents datasets and analyses of 3D LiDAR scans capturing the rutting behavior of a rover wheel in a single-wheel terramechanics testbed. The data were acquired using a LiDAR sensor to record the terrain deformation caused by the wheel’s passage through a Toyoura sandbed, which mimics lunar regolith. Vertical loads of 25 N, 40 N, and 65 N were applied to study how rutting patterns change, focusing on rut amplitude, height, and inclination. This study emphasizes the extraction and processing of terrain profiles from noisy point cloud data, using methods like curve fitting and moving averages to capture the ruts’ geometric characteristics. A sine wave model, adjusted for translation, scaling, and inclination, was fitted to describe the wheel-induced wave-like patterns. It was found that the mean height of the terrain increases after the grouser wheel passes over it, forming ruts that slope downward, likely due to the transition from static to dynamic sinkage. Both the rut depth at the end of the wheel’s path and the incline increased with larger loads. These findings contribute to understanding wheel–terrain interactions and provide a reference for validating and calibrating models and simulations. The dataset from this study is made available to the scientific community.
AB - This paper presents datasets and analyses of 3D LiDAR scans capturing the rutting behavior of a rover wheel in a single-wheel terramechanics testbed. The data were acquired using a LiDAR sensor to record the terrain deformation caused by the wheel’s passage through a Toyoura sandbed, which mimics lunar regolith. Vertical loads of 25 N, 40 N, and 65 N were applied to study how rutting patterns change, focusing on rut amplitude, height, and inclination. This study emphasizes the extraction and processing of terrain profiles from noisy point cloud data, using methods like curve fitting and moving averages to capture the ruts’ geometric characteristics. A sine wave model, adjusted for translation, scaling, and inclination, was fitted to describe the wheel-induced wave-like patterns. It was found that the mean height of the terrain increases after the grouser wheel passes over it, forming ruts that slope downward, likely due to the transition from static to dynamic sinkage. Both the rut depth at the end of the wheel’s path and the incline increased with larger loads. These findings contribute to understanding wheel–terrain interactions and provide a reference for validating and calibrating models and simulations. The dataset from this study is made available to the scientific community.
KW - grouser-wheel
KW - planetary rover
KW - rutting
KW - single wheel test
KW - terramechanics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85216185934&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85216185934&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/aerospace12010071
DO - 10.3390/aerospace12010071
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85216185934
SN - 2226-4310
VL - 12
JO - Aerospace
JF - Aerospace
IS - 1
M1 - 71
ER -