Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Legacy Archives

Nissan and NASA team up to develop self-driving cars

Add as a preferred source on Google

When it comes to future-technology buzzwords, few are as evocative as “self-driving cars” and “NASA.”

So the news that Nissan and America’s space agency will team up on a new project to develop self-driving cars should have futurists all atwitter.

Recommended Videos

The five-year research project will involve researchers from Nissan’s Silicon Valley facility and the NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, California. They’ll work to develop autonomous systems and “prepare for commercial application of the technology,” Nissan says.

NASA already has plenty of experience with robotic vehicles, of course. You’ve probably heard of its Mars rovers.

This test will be strictly Earthbound, though. A fleet of self-driving Leaf electric cars will be used as couriers and controlled from a central point, sort of like how NASA controls its rovers from a remote command center.

The project is intended to prove the viability of remote-controlled ground transportation, and Nissan will share components it developed for self-driving cars so far. The first cars in the test fleet will deploy before the end of the year.

For its part, Nissan hopes to put a self-driving car on sale by 2020, and has already made some progress toward that goal.

It demonstrated a self-driving Leaf prototype at its Nissan 360 media event last year, and claims the safety systems it currently offers will form the building blocks for full vehicular autonomy.

Nissan will also launch a “traffic-jam pilot” system in 2016, and “multiple-lane controls” in 2018 as stepping stones to its ultimate goal.

However, the self-driving car Nissan plans to put on sale in 2020 may not be fully autonomous. The company previously said it will still require a human driver at the wheel.

That driver won’t have to wear a spacesuit, though.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
A stolen Kia reveals the hidden limits of connected car technology
Kia can see where your stolen car is. GDPR means it won't share that in real time. That is the entire problem.
Kia EV3 design

If you’re buying a car with connected car technology, thinking it would help you to recover it in the event of theft, you might want to recalibrate your expectations. 

A recent incident in the UK, in which a car owner had three tracking devices installed in his car and still couldn’t recover it, led the carmaker to state that connected-car technology isn’t a “certified security vehicle tracker” (via the BBC).

Read more
Cambrige experts find utterly simple fix for longer lasting EV batteries. Just put some pressure on it.
Scientists found a way to make EV batteries last longer without reinventing the battery
EV Charging

EV battery breakthroughs typically involve new chemistry, exotic materials, or faster charging/higher capacity. But a new study reveals that you can skip all the fancy stuff and go with a very simple solution, Researchers from the University of Cambridge found that putting the battery under the right amount of pressure actually helps.

The study was about how physical pressure affects lithium-ion battery life, which found that keeping cells under constant pressure could double their lifespan. The work was published in Nature Energy, and the team says the improvement came without changing the active materials, electrolyte, or basic battery chemistry.

Read more
BMW reveals redesigned X5 with petrol, hybrid, EV, and hydrogen options
BMW couldn't decide on a powertrain, so it launched all of them
BMW X5

BMW has pulled the wraps off the fifth-generation X5, giving one of its best-selling luxury SUVs its biggest overhaul yet. The new model brings a fresh Neue Klasse-inspired design, a completely redesigned interior, and the broadest choice of powertrains the X5 has ever offered. Alongside petrol, diesel, and plug-in hybrid versions, BMW has introduced the first fully electric iX5, while confirming that a hydrogen-powered X5 will join the lineup at a later stage.

More powertrain choices, more technology, and a fresh design

Read more