They'll have to find a way to make the virtual robot successfully align a communications dish, repair a solar array and fix a habitat leak. Thankfully, Valkyrie doesn't need food, so they won't need to make it plant potatoes in the simulation. What they do need to figure out, though, is how the robot can accomplish all those with the added trouble of a communication delay between Earth and the red planet. Hey, the dust storm was supposed to have knocked out the communications dish, after all.

The agency has been planning this contest since 2015 and even sent two Valkyries to MIT and Northeastern University in Boston to get them ready for the competition. Interested research teams can register until September 16th, since the two-month-long qualifying rounds will begin three days later. The finalists that will be announced in December will demonstrate their simulation in June next year. NASA says whatever technologies the teams develop will be transferable, which means actual Valkyries and even their predecessors can use them.