Heavy Construction on the Moon

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Take a look at any construction project or surface mining operation here on Earth and likely there will be bulldozers, loaders, and trucks; all essential in excavating and building structures. But as we look to the future with NASA’s Vision for Space Exploration which calls for a return to the Moon to build bases and habitats, how will heavy construction and excavation be accomplished on the lunar surface?

Caterpillar Inc., a company known for their heavy earth moving machines and the world’s leading manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, is looking to tackle that issue. They’ve partnered with NASA to create technology that could benefit construction and mine workers everywhere in the future, whether they grab a hard-hat or a space helmet on their way to work.

Caterpillar was one of 38 companies awarded seed funds as part of NASA’s Innovative Partnerships Program (IPP). Projects are selected for this program because of their potential to advance key technologies that will help meet NASA’s critical needs for the future.

Caterpillar has proposed a multi-terrain loader for lunar surface development. Currently, they are working with NASA to develop the technology to augment existing earth moving equipment with sensors and on-board processors to provide time-delayed tele-operational control.

The loader would be able to undertake regolith moving such as grading, leveling, trenching, strip-mining, excavating and habitat covering. It also could be used for construction of lunar bases, the deployment or relocation of surface assets, as well as for mobility on the Moon.

Why is a down-to-earth company like Caterpillar interested in the Moon?

“The way we looked it, there are technologies that are needed on both the Earth and the moon,” Michele Blubaugh, Manager of Intelligence Technology Services at Caterpillar, told Universe Today. “We looked at autonomous operations of equipment as being the same type of technology that could be used on the moon as well as in a mining application. We have the same end result as NASA.”

That end result is to remove operators of construction equipment from a dangerous situation, whether it’s a machine operator in a dangerous mine environment or whether the operator is an astronaut on the lunar surface trying to excavate habitat sites.

There are two types of tele-operation. One is remote operation, where control of the machine is done with a remote operating system. There would be either a vision system on board or someone could actually see the machine as its operating. The other is autonomous operation, where the desired work is programmed and offloaded onto the machine and then the machine carries out the work without anyone interfacing with the machine, either remotely or directly. The machine would read the program at the site, positions itself, have avoidance capabilities to avoid rocks or any object that might be in the way, operating on its own to complete the given mission.

Caterpillar is working on both types of operation. “It’s one step to the next,” said Blublaugh. “You need both of those technologies developed, with remote operations first, and then the ultimate is autonomous operations.”

They are also investigating working remotely or autonomously on the Moon from Earth, and dealing with the six second time delay between the earth and the moon.

Caterpillar 287 C Skid Steer Loader.  Image Credit:  Caterpillar, Inc.
Currently, there are two multi-terrain loaders, the Caterpillar 287 C Skid Steer loader, outfitted with duplicates of the remote technology. One is located at Caterpillar’s proving grounds near their headquarters in Peoria, Illinois and the other is at the rock yard at Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. “That way we can develop it together,” said Blubaugh. “When we’re doing something, we each have a machine so we know how something reacts.”

The technology is still in the development stage. “We did some initial basic demonstrations when we delivered the machine in May of 2007 at JSC,” Blubaugh said. “A group of us went down, and the people at JSC were taught to use the machine and what the capabilities were, and we discussed the interfaces between the different types of technology.” In the summer of 2008, the group from Caterpillar will return to JSC to do an interim demonstration at a desert site.

Both machines have been undergoing tests. “Within the contract, NASA is responsible for some of the development and Caterpillar is responsible for other portions,” said Blubaugh, “and then there are things that we do jointly to move the technology along faster, so everyone benefits. JSC gets benefits of our facilities and our engineers working on technology, and vice versa, CAT gets benefits from the folks working at JSC and the technology they have and their facilities, so it’s a mutually beneficial relationship between Johnson and CAT.”

Caterpillar has another contract proposal going to JSC shortly that takes the project to the next level.

“We’ll look to do berming, which is building an earthen berm around a site, leveling and sensing the position of the blade,” said Blubaugh. “We take the technology that we have accomplished today and take it to the next level. It’s almost an annual step by step process in the development and our target date for having a signature demo showcasing this type of technology autonomy, being able to load a program into the machine and having it operate all by itself is targeted for 2012.”

Since the 287 C skid loader is extremely heavy and runs on a diesel engine, it couldn’t be used on the moon. A prototype of a lunar loader-type vehicle is being developed by NASA and Caterpillar is assisting with developing the blade. “So, we’ll be involved in the project all the way along as it develops,” said Blubaugh.

The one-year IPP projects involve collaboration between NASA and a company from the private sector, academia or another government laboratory. All IPP companies address technology barriers with cost-shared, joint-development programs.

Other examples of NASA IPP research areas include the pursuit of improved engine performance and reduced emissions for aeronautics research; high-temperature materials for lunar lander engines, optics to lower error rates of future space telescopes, and a glass bubble insulation demonstration for cryogenic tanks.

With a total cost of the Caterpillar project of just under $1,000,000, Caterpillar is estimated to contribute about 45% and NASA 55%. For the entire NASA’s Innovative Partnership Program $9 million in funding comes from NASA’s Technology Transfer Partnerships budget, $13 million is provided by NASA sources in programs, projects, or field centers, and $12 million from external partners for a total combined financial commitment of $34 million.

“A lot of us at Caterpillar grew up in the time of the first space development,” said Blubaugh, “it’s quite exciting for us to be a part of this. Plus, it’s just a good investment in the future.”

Earth’s Magnetic Field Could Protect Astronauts on the Moon

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There’s the Earth, and the Moon, separated by 385,000 or so kilometres. Once the astronauts return to the Moon, they’ll lose all the protection of the Earth’s atmosphere and magnetic field – getting blasted by radiation and cosmic rays. Or will they? According to researchers from the University of Washington, there are times when the Earth does help shield the Moon.

One of the major risks of space travel are solar storms. These are flurries of particles blasted off the Sun at nearly the speed of light. They can arrive with almost no notice. As soon as an Earth-directed flare is seen on the surface of the Sun, the particles will arrive just minutes afterwards.

To avoid a potentially lethal blast of radiation, the astronauts will need to seek cover in a shielded base, or at least make sure there’s a mass of lunar soil between them and the oncoming storm. When they’ve only got a few minutes warning, the astronauts will be restricted to how far they can explore on the lunar surface.

Here on Earth, we’re protected by the magnetosphere, which directs the solar wind harmlessly around the planet. Astronomers have known for many years that the Moon passes through the Earth’s magnetic sphere, and could share in our protective shield.

Researchers from the University of Washington have developed computer models of the Earth’s magnetosphere, calculating the ideal times when astronauts will receive the most protection from solar storms.

There’s an additional problem with solar storms. As the particles interact with the Earth, they heat up oxygen in the ionosphere. These particles stream away from the Earth and collide with the Moon. These are moving less quickly than the solar wind particles, but they can still add to an astronaut’s radiation exposure.

Original Source: UW News Release

NASA Announces a New Gravity Field Mission to the Moon

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Just in case you’d forgotten that the focus is going to be on the Moon for the next few decades, here’s another mission announcement: the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL). Due to launch in 2011, this mission will fly a pair of spacecraft around the Moon to measure its gravity field in precise detail. By the time GRAIL’s done with the Moon, we’ll know every lump and bump 1,000 times better than before

This new mission was announced by NASA on December 10th at the meeting of the American Geophysical Union. The mission was selected out of a possible two dozen proposals.

If all goes well, the two spacecraft will launch together some time around September 6, 2011 transferring directly into a lunar orbit. After a few days of orbiting, they’ll conduct a 90-day study of the Moon’s gravity field.

This mission will be very similar to NASA’s previously launched Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE). These twin spacecraft were launched 5 years ago, and have measured the Earth’s gravity field in incredible detail. It allows scientists to track melting glaciers, and the changes in the Earth’s crust after powerful earthquakes.

GRAIL will measure the gravity field at certain points around the Moon, finding any changes which are 1 million times less than the Earth’s overall gravity. This data should be about 1,000 times better than the best gravity maps ever made of the Moon.

NASA is estimating that the total budget for the project will be $375 million, including design, development, launch and staffing.

In addition to the handy gravity field information, GRAIL should give scientists better information about the formation of the Moon and the rest of the rocky planets in the Solar System.

Original Source: NASA/JPL News Release

Odyssey Moon is the First Lunar X-Prize Entrant

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I mentioned the $30 million Google Lunar X-Prize a few months ago, but now there’s a bit of an update: the first team has stepped forward and announced that they’ll be trying to claim it. The team is called Odyssey Moon, and it stars International Space University founder Bob Richards and Inmarsat CFO Ramin Khadem. If all goes well, they’ll land a rover on the Moon within the next 7 years.

Just a quick recap. The Google Lunar X-Prize follows on the success of the original Ansari X-Prize. The first private group that can land a rover on the surface of the Moon, and complete a series of challenges before December 31st, 2014 will win $30 million.

Team organizers have said that hundreds of teams have expressed an interest, but nobody has actually filled out the necessary paperwork… until today.

Team Odyssey Moon announced their intention to compete for the Google Lunar X-Prize at the Space Investment Summit in San Jose, California. The team will be based on the Isle of Man, off the coast of England. Not a place known for its bustling space commerce, but the team founders say the location has the right business regulations and tax laws for such an unusual business venture.

And that’s the point, they expect this to be a business venture. Richards and Khadem believe they have a viable business plan for operating a Moon rover business. They’ll finance operations by the delivery of science, exploration and commercial payloads to the surface of the Moon. According to the Odyssey Moon folks, the $30 million prize is just a nice benefit.

For my fellow Canadians, you’ll be please to hear that MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates has been selected as the mission’s prime contractor. MDA has developed the robotic arms used on the space shuttle and International Space Station, and hardware for other space missions.

In addition to the two founders, the Planetary Society announced today that they’re going to pitch in with Odyssey Moon, helping out with education, public involvement, and serving as a science liaison for the project.

Although Odyssey Moon is just the first team to announce their intentions for the $30 million prize, they won’t be the last. Prize founder Peter Diamandis expects that several teams will make launch attempts within a handful of years – it seems unlikely that a rover won’t succeed before the time limit ends.

Original Source: Odyssey Moon

‘Tis the Season to Explore the North Pole on the Moon

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Mention the North Pole this time of year and perhaps what comes to mind are visions of snowy, candy cane-lined streets leading to a candle-lit workshop. But how about sun-drenched regolith dotted with craters cast in permanent shadows? Those are the types of images revealed in a new detailed map of the north pole — on the moon.

A mosaic created from data obtained by the SMART-1 spacecraft shows detailed features of the geography and illumination of the lunar north pole. These maps can be used by future explorers as an aid for traveling and traversing on the moon.

The lunar poles are of interest for science and the upcoming exploration of the moon mainly because of their exposure to sunlight. There are areas that are continually bathed in sunlight, but within craters in the same region are dark areas that rarely receive any light, and therefore could contain water ice. Both these aspects would be important for potential lunar base sites.

“Solar illumination makes these areas ideal for robotic outposts or lunar bases making use of solar power, ” said the European Space Agency’s Bernard Foing, who is Project Scientist for the SMART-1 Spacecraft.

Any water ice on the moon would be useful for the inhabitants of a lunar base.

The SMART-1 north pole map covers an area of about 800 by 600 km and shows the geographical locations of several craters. Of special interest is Peary Crater, the largest impact crater that is close to the lunar north pole. At this latitude the interior of the crater receives little sunlight, but SMART-1 was able to observe it during phases when the crater floor was sufficiently illuminated for imaging.

Also imaged was Crater Plaskett, located on the northern far side of the moon, about 200 kilometers from the north pole. Because of the location of this crater it receives sunlight at a low angle and it has been suggested as a lunar base that could be used for a possible analog to simulate conditions of a manned mission to Mars.

Foing also said that the discovery of water ice on the moon could help us understand Earth’s history as well. “If the layers of ice come from the volatiles deposited by comets or water-rich asteroids, we could better understand how, and how much, water and organic material was delivered to Earth over its history,” he said.

Using electric propulsion navigation, SMART-1 reached lunar orbit in November of 2004 and performed a year and a half of scienctific observations. The mission ended with a controlled impact on the moon’s surface in September of 2006.

The polar mosaics were presented and discussed at the 9th International Lunar Exploration Working Group (ILEWG) lunar conference in October 2007.

SMART-1 science investigations include studies of the chemical composition of the Moon, of geophysical processes such as volcanism, tectonics, cratering, and erosion, and high resolution studies in preparation for future steps of lunar exploration.

Original News Source: ESA Press Release

Inflatable Lunar Habitat to Be Tested in Antarctica

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As humans prepare to return to the Moon, this time to stay, there are so many different technologies that need to be developed and tested. NASA and the NSF are testing out a new prototype for an inflatable habitat that might eventually protect humans on the Moon. And they’re testing it in the most extreme place on Earth: Antarctica.

The newly developed inflatable habitat is inflated and pressurized, giving potential astronauts their own atmosphere. Inside the tent is heated, offering up 35 square metres (384 square feet) of living space, under a 2.4-metre (8-foot) ceiling. It also has access points for electrical power.

NASA currently uses a 50-year old tent design called a Jamesway hut. Television viewers will recognize these designs in the show M*A*S*H. Although there are new approaches to this old design, they’re rigid, difficult to ship, and have limited insulation. When you’re working in Antarctica, a lack of insulation is a serious problem.

The purpose of this new design is to test out how well an inflatable habitat will work in terms of packing, transportation, set up, power consumption and damage tolerance.

When astronauts do finally return to the Moon by 2020, they’ll be setting up a permanent lunar outpost. An inflatable habitat like this could be carried on future lunar rovers, and would allow the astronauts to set up a temporary home, far away from the permanent base. This would greatly increase their range, and allow the exploration of the most interesting lunar features – not just those nearby the base.

The inflatable habitat is being developed under NASA’s Innovative Partnerships Program.

Original Source: NSF News Release

Earth Rise, Seen by Kaguya

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The team that developed and launched the Japanese Kaguya mission to the Moon earned their entire salary on this photo right here – a high-definition image of the Earth, rising over the horizon of the Moon. It’s like the Apollo Earth-rise image… just in high-def.

Just to let you know, I actually cropped the image a bit to fit Universe Today a little better. If you’d like to get at the original 1920×1080 pixel image, click here. I made this baby my desktop. And so can you. Once you’re looking at the full-sized image in your browser, right click on it. There’s should be an option that lets you set it as your desktop.

Although people have romanticized about what astronauts would see standing on the surface of the Moon, it’s actually not possible. Since the Moon is tidally locked to the Earth, it shows the same face to us at all times. If you were standing on the surface of the Moon, the Earth is always in the same position in the sky at all times. So, you could never actually see the Earth rise above the horizon.

To capture a sequence like this, you’ve got to be in a spacecraft, orbiting the Moon, and looking towards the Earth. Then, as the spacecraft comes into the right position, the Earth will appear to rise above the horizon. So, it’s sort of a trick. But still… what a picture.

And what a way to put everything here on Earth back into perspective. As Carl Sagan said when talking about the pale blue dot of an Earth captured by NASA’s Voyage 1. But instead of “dot”, substitute, “cool high-definition image of the Earth”.

“Look again at that dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every “superstar,” every “supreme leader,” every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there-on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.”

Thanks Carl. And thanks Kaguya, consider this mission a success. But still send the science, that’ll be helpful too.

Original Source: JAXA News Release

Chang’e-1 Enters Lunar Orbit

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Chinese space officials announced that their Chang’e-1 spacecraft entered lunar orbit on Monday, completing a new milestone in the country’s goals of space exploration. The spacecraft is scheduled to begin scanning the lunar surface on Wednesday, but first, it has to complete two additional braking maneuvers.

Mission controllers gave the command at 11:15 local time from the Beijing Aerospace Control Center (BACC) for Chang’e-1 to make its braking maneuver – when it was 300 km from the Moon. It completed the maneuver 22 minutes later, entering a true circumlunar orbit.

This braking maneuver was critical. If it braked too early, the probe wouldn’t have been captured by the Moon’s gravity, and it would have drifted off into space. If it braked too late, it would have just crashed onto the lunar surface.

The spacecraft’s speed was slowed from 2.3 km/second to 1.9 km/second. It’s now traveling in a 12-hour elliptical orbit around the Moon, getting as close as 200 km above the surface, and then swinging out to 8,600 km.

Two more braking maneuvers are planned to lower its orbit; one on November 6th, and another on the 7th. When it’s all said and done, Chang’e-1 will be going a mere 1.59 km/second, in a 127-minute orbit. It will then begin its science operations.

If all goes well, Chang’e-1 will provide detailed images and data on the lunar surface. China has announced their plans to send a robotic lander to the Moon by 2012 years, and humans within 15 years.

It should remain in lunar orbit for about a year.

Original Source: Xinhua News Release

Chinese Moon Mission Blasts Off

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The Moon had been lonely for a while, but now there’s no shortage of spacecraft on the way. The latest visitor, China’s Chang’e-1, blasted off today from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre, Sichuan, atop a Long March 3A rocket. Although this spacecraft is just a lunar orbiter, it begins the country’s journey to putting a lander down on the surface of the Moon before 2020.

Just like the Japanese spacecraft already orbiting the Moon, and the upcoming US Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, this Chinese spacecraft will studying the Moon in detail.

It has four major objectives: to map the Moon’s surface in 3-D, to analyze the abundance of 14 chemical elements, to measure the depth of the lunar soil (or regolith), and to study the space weather between the Earth and the Moon.

The ambitious spacecraft weighs in at 2,350 kg, and will transition to a low, circular lunar orbit, skimming just 200 km above the surface. It’s expected to begin its Earth-Moon transfer burn on October 31st, and arrive in lunar orbit on November 5th. It’s expected that Chang’e-1 will take its first images on the Moon in late November, and continue scientific observations for a year.

Original Source: ESA News Release

Kaguya Releases Its Second Baby Satellite

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As we mentioned in past articles, the Japanese Kaguya spacecraft, now orbiting the Moon, is actually a collection of satellites. The largest satellite is Kaguya. It’s the one equipped with all the cameras and the suite of scientific instruments.

But Kaguya was also carrying two baby satellites. The first Relay satellite, nicknamed Okina, was released on October 9th. Today Kaguya released its second sub-satellite: the tiny Very Long Baseline Interferometer (or VRAD). VRAD’s job will be to help Kaguya carefully map out the Moon’s gravity field.

Original Source: JAXA News Release