Skip to main content

CIMON the flying brain is back on Earth after 14 months in space

A robotic assistant recently returned to Earth after spending just over a year on the International Space Station (ISS).

Recommended Videos

CIMON (pronounced “Simon” and short for Crew Interactive Mobile companiON) returned with other cargo aboard SpaceX’s CRS-18 spacecraft last week.

For those not in the know, CIMON was developed by Airbus and IBM in collaboration with Germany’s DLR space agency. The robot is essentially an advanced floating computer and features a simply drawn face on the monitor to encourage more realistic communication. Described by a member of the Airbus team as “a kind of flying brain,” the A.I.-powered device is designed to interact with astronauts while behaving like a regular member of the crew.

“CIMON makes work easier for the astronauts when carrying out everyday routine tasks,” Airbus said of the robot, adding that it can “increase efficiency, facilitate mission success, and improve security, as it can also serve as an early warning system for technical problems.”

Mission success

The robot’s recent deployment was notable for being the first form of A.I. to spend time on the ISS, and by all accounts seems to have been a success.

“CIMON is a technology demonstration that has completely met our expectation,” Christian Karrasch, CIMON Project Manager at the German Aerospace Center, said in a release.

Karrasch added that the robot assistant demonstrated during testing that it’s able to interact with astronauts and recognize their faces, as well as find its own way through the sprawling space station using 12 internal fans for flight in the microgravity conditions.

“With CIMON, we were able to lay the foundations for human assistance systems in space to support astronauts in their tasks and perhaps, in the future, to take over some of their work,” the project manager said.

CIMON Mark II

The mission went so well that the team is already developing a more advanced version with better flight control and improvements to CIMON’s A.I. smarts.

The plan is to deliver the upgraded CIMON to the ISS in December 2019 for further testing with astronauts.

It’s worth pointing out that that CIMON wasn’t the first robot to visit the space station. In its 20-year history, the space lab has also hosted Japan’s Kirobo, a floating camera sphere called Int-Ball, and a humanoid robot named Robonaut.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Enjoy NASA’s ‘best images’ of science on space station in 2022
NASA astronaut Kayla Barron checks plants growing inside the space station's Veggie facility.

It’s been a busy year for the International Space Station (ISS).

Orbiting about 250 miles above Earth, the ISS has welcomed new astronauts and bid farewell to others, conducted 12 spacewalks, hosted NASA’s first paying tourists, dodged hazardous debris, and experienced a serious leak from a docked spacecraft.

Read more
Watch space station’s new solar array unfurl in space
A new solar array unfurling at the space station in December 2022.

Two American astronauts successfully completed a spacewalk at the International Space Station (ISS) on Saturday, December 3.

NASA’s Josh Cassada and Frank Rubio spent just over seven hours outside the orbital laboratory before concluding their spacewalk at 2:21 p.m. ET. This was only the second spacewalk for both astronauts, following the pair’s first one on November 15.

Read more
Space Station received special visitors 22 years ago today
The International Space Station.

On this day 22 years ago, three astronauts arrived at the International Space Station (ISS) to begin what's turned out to be a continuous human presence in orbit.

https://twitter.com/Space_Station/status/1587806742225690624

Read more