NASA Partners With SpaceX, Blue Origin, and More to Send Large Payloads to The Moon
Hello reader!
Below is a news that was posted on yesterday (11/18) on the The Verge
website highlighting that NASA did partners with SpaceX, Blue Origin, and more
to send large payloads to the Moon.
Duda Falcão
SCIENCE - SPACE - SPACEX
NASA Partners With SpaceX, Blue
Origin, and More to Send Large Payloads to The Moon
The companies are aiming to land in the early 2020s
By Loren Grush
Nov 18, 2019, 6:07pm EST
In its ongoing effort to send cargo — and eventually
people — to the lunar surface, NASA announced five
new partnerships with commercial space companies that have designed robotic
landers that can take large payloads to the Moon. The additions include some
well-known industry heavyweights, such as SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Sierra
Nevada Corporation, which have already partnered with NASA for other projects.
The newcomers will join an already
formed pool of nine companies that are part of NASA’s fledgling CLPS
program, which stands for Commercial Lunar Payload Services. The goal is to
have multiple different capabilities for transporting scientific instruments
and cargo to the Moon, as NASA attempts to send people back to the lunar
surface by 2024.
The newcomers will join
an already formed pool of
nine companies
Being chosen to be part of the CLPS program doesn’t
guarantee each company a NASA contract to send their spacecraft to the Moon. It
simply means that NASA will consider using these companies if and when it wants
to send cargo or scientific instruments to the lunar surface. NASA will put out
calls for capabilities that the agency wants, and the companies will bid to
have the opportunity to ferry NASA’s cargo to the Moon. In May, NASA selected
three companies from its original pool of participants — Astrobotic, Intuitive
Machines, and Orbit Beyond — to send robotic landers to the Moon in the early
2020s, with each spacecraft carrying a variety of payloads. Only two of those
companies are continuing toward that goal now, as Orbit Beyond said it would
not be able to meet its late 2020 deadline.
Image: SNC
An artistic rendering of Sierra Nevada Corporation’s
lander.
|
The companies being added today — SpaceX, Blue Origin,
Sierra Nevada Corporation, Ceres Robotics, Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems Inc. —
all vow to transport much heavier payloads than what the original nine CLPS
companies say they can carry. The original nine companies needed to be able to
carry up to 22 pounds (10 kilograms) to the lunar surface, but some of these
new providers claim they will eventually be able to carry several tons to the
Moon. “We have a need and saw a need to bring on some additional providers that
had enhanced lander capabilities,” Steve Clarke, deputy associate administrator
for exploration in NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, said during a press
conference announcing the new CLPS participants. “This is based on our
objectives — the agency’s objectives — to get to the moon as soon as possible,
both from a scientific standpoint and from a human exploration standpoint.”
“We have a need and saw a
need to bring on some
additional providers.”
Thanks to a challenge from Vice President Mike Pence,
NASA is scrambling to send humans back to the Moon within the next four years.
As the agency prepares to meet that challenge, NASA wants to send tech to the
Moon to study the lunar environment more in-depth, as well as demonstrate
technologies that might be used for future human missions. Additionally, NASA
wants to send a new rover to the Moon called VIPER, which will travel to the
lunar south pole and scout for potential water ice that might be lurking there.
Engineers are interested in using this water ice as a resource for future human
missions.
For Blue Origin, the company is bidding its very public
Blue Moon lander design, which founder Jeff Bezos first
unveiled in May. Meanwhile, SpaceX is offering up its future Starship
spacecraft, which the company has been building at its test sites in Boca
Chica, Texas, and Cape Canaveral, Florida. SpaceX president Gwynne Shotwell
claims Starship, which is designed to take off from the Moon after landing on
it, can bring up to 100 metric tons to the lunar surface.
Image: Blue Origin
An artistic rendering of Blue Origin’s Blue Moon lander
on the surface of the Moon.
|
Some of the companies are fairly ambitious with their
timelines, claiming they’ll be able to send their spacecraft to the Moon within
the next few years. Ceres Robotics is aiming to land by 2023, while SNC says it
will be ready by 2022. SpaceX, which is proposing the largest lander of all
five companies, says it is trying to land a cargo version of Starship on the
Moon by 2022. “Starship right now, the early missions we’re very focused on on
cargo — both satellite delivery to orbit, science delivery to the surface of
the Moon,” Shotwell said during today’s press conference. After that, the
company will focus on putting people on board Starship.
None of these five companies have actually built or
launched their vehicles yet, so it’s likely their timelines will be delayed,
and it’s still unclear exactly which rockets will take these vehicles to space.
Presumably, SpaceX will launch its Starship on its own future rocket, the Super
Heavy, while Blue Origin’s lander will fly on the company’s future New Glenn
rocket. The details for the other cargo spacecraft have not been finalized yet,
and it’s still unknown how NASA plans to use these companies in the years ahead.
In the meantime, NASA is still searching for the lander
that will take humans to the surface of the Moon. The agency recently put out a
call for proposals with final submissions due by November 1st. A decision on
that crucial piece of technology should come in the months ahead.
Source: Website of The Verge - https://www.theverge.com
Comentário: Pois é leitor, olha aí, não podemos mais
errar. Não podemos continuar fazendo escolhas erradas, não há mais tempo, o
mundo caminha para o espaço e estamos ficando há passo largos para atrás, inclusive
por conta disso, perdendo grandes profissionais que podem deixar o país, isto por
continuarem observando sem esperança de mudança, as péssimas práticas de
outrora, que só favorecem aos incompetentes e ao mau caratismo dos maus intencionados. É muito
triste leitor, e a continuar assim iremos caminhar para o fundo do poço. A
partir de hoje até amanhã, AEB irá
promover no Parque Tecnológico de São José dos Campos (SP) a 3ª edição do 'Fórum
da Indústria Espacial Brasileira', evento este que considero um divisor de águas
para o futuro do PEB. Ou Governo Bolsonaro se posiciona firmemente fazendo as escolhas
certas, ou iremos pro fundo do poço. Aproveito para agradecer ao nosso leitor amigo Ruy Botelho pelo envio dessa matéria.
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