Illustration of Intuitive Machines Nova-C lander for the IM-3 mission taking four NASA investigations to Reiner Gamma. Credits: Intuitive Machines
NASA has awarded Intuitive Machines of Houston a contract to deliver
research, including science investigations and a technology demonstration, to
the Moon in 2024. The commercial delivery is part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar
Payload Services (CLPS) initiative and the
Artemis program.
The investigations aboard Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lander are destined
for Reiner Gamma, one of the most distinctive and enigmatic natural features on
the Moon. Known as a lunar swirl, Reiner Gamma is on the western edge of
the Moon, as seen from Earth, and is one of the most visible lunar swirls.
Scientists continue to learn what lunar swirls are, how they form, and their
relationship to the Moon’s magnetic field.
“This delivery to the Moon will help the U.S. expand our capabilities and
learn more about this interesting region,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate
administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. “Observing
lunar swirls can give us information about the Moon’s radiation environment and
perhaps how to mitigate its effects. With more and more science and technology
demonstrations on the lunar surface, we can help prepare for sustainable
astronaut missions through Artemis.”
Intuitive Machines will receive $77.5 million for the contract and is
responsible for end-to-end delivery services, including payload integration,
delivery from Earth to the surface of the Moon, and payload operations. This is
Intuitive Machines’ third task order award, the first of which is a
delivery to Oceanus Procellarum on the Moon during the
first quarter of 2022. This award is the seventh surface delivery task award issued to a CLPS
partner.
“These investigations show how CLPS is capable of delivering payloads to
the lunar surface that will address our primary scientific goals for lunar
exploration and discovery,” said Chris Culbert, manager of the CLPS initiative
at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. “We aim to learn more about lunar
swirls and this payload manifest is designed to obtain data unique to the
geographical feature of Reiner Gamma.”
The four investigations Intuitive Machines will deliver to Reiner Gamma are
collectively expected to be about 203 pounds (92 kg) in mass and include:
- Lunar Vertex is
among NASA’s Payloads and Research Investigations on the Surface of the
Moon (PRISM) selections. It is a combination of stationary lander payloads
and a rover that will make detailed measurements of the magnetic field,
plasma environment and regolith properties. The lander and rover data will
augment observations collected in orbit. Combined, the observations will
help show how these mysterious lunar swirls form and evolve – and how they
connect to local magnetic fields in the same regions. Lunar Vertex is
funded through the agency’s Science Mission Directorate and is led by the
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.
- Cooperative
Autonomous Distributed Robotic Exploration (CADRE) consists
of mobile robots programmed to work as an autonomous team to explore the
lunar surface, collect data, and map different areas of the Moon in 3D.
CADRE uses its inertial measurement unit, stereo cameras, and a Sun sensor
to track the position of each robot as they explore the lunar surface.
CADRE is funded by NASA’s Game Changing Development program under the
agency’s Space Technology Mission Directorate and is led by NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.
- MoonLIGHT
retroreflector is a laser retroreflector, which reflects
laser beams sent from Earth directly back from the Moon to receivers on
Earth. This allows very precise measurement of the distances between the
reflector and the ground station. This technique can be used to investigate
relativity, the gravitational dynamics of the Earth-Moon system and the
deep lunar interior. MoonLIGHT is managed by the European Space
Agency (ESA).
- Lunar Space
Environment Monitor (LUSEM) uses a pair of apertures
to detect high-energy particles on the lunar surface. LUSEM will monitor
variations in the near-surface space environment when the Moon is inside
and outside Earth’s magnetotail – the trailing end of the magnetic fields
surrounding our planet, which can serve as a buffer for incoming
radiation. LUSEM is managed by the Korea Astronomy and Space Science
Institute (KASI) in South Korea.
As NASA continues plans for multiple commercial deliveries to the Moon,
future payloads that may be delivered with CLPS could also include other
rovers, power sources, and science experiments, including technology
demonstrations to later be infused into the Artemis program.
Learn more about CLPS at: https://www.nasa.gov/clps
Dource: https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-selects-intuitive-machines-for-new-lunar-science-delivery
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