As the Artemis campaign leads humanity to the Moon and eventually Mars, NASA is refining its state-of-the-art navigation and positioning technologies to guide a new era of lunar exploration.
A technology demonstration helping pave
the way for these developments is the Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment (LuGRE) payload, a joint effort between NASA and the Italian Space Agency
to demonstrate the viability of using existing GNSS (Global Navigation
Satellite System) signals for positioning, navigation, and timing on the Moon.
During its voyage on an upcoming
delivery to the Moon as part of NASA’s CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative, LuGRE would demonstrate acquiring and tracking signals
from both the U.S. GPS and European Union Galileo GNSS constellations during
transit to the Moon, during lunar orbit, and finally for up to two weeks on the
lunar surface itself.
The Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment (LuGRE) will
investigate whether signals from two Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)
constellations, the U.S. Global Positioning System (GPS) and European Union’s
Galileo, can be tracked at the Moon and used for positioning, navigation, and
timing (PNT).
The LuGRE payload is one of the
first demonstrations of GNSS signal reception and navigation on and around the
lunar surface, an important milestone for how lunar missions will access
navigation and positioning technology. If successful, LuGRE would demonstrate
that spacecraft can use signals from existing GNSS satellites at lunar
distances, reducing their reliance on ground-based stations on the Earth for
lunar navigation.
Today, GNSS constellations support
essential services like navigation, banking, power grid synchronization,
cellular networks, and telecommunications. Near-Earth space missions use these
signals in flight to determine critical operational information like location,
velocity, and time.
NASA and the Italian Space Agency
want to expand the boundaries of GNSS use cases. In 2019, the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission broke the world record for farthest GPS
signal acquisition 116,300 miles from the Earth’s surface — nearly half of the
238,900 miles between Earth and the Moon. Now, LuGRE could double that
distance.
“GPS makes our lives safer and more viable here on Earth,” said Kevin Coggins, NASA deputy associate administrator and SCaN (Space Communications and Navigation) Program manager at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “As we seek to extend humanity beyond our home planet, LuGRE should confirm that this extraordinary technology can do the same for us on the Moon.”
NASA, Firefly, Qascom, and Italian Space Agency team members examine LuGRE hardware in a clean room. Firefly Aerospace
Reliable space communication and navigation systems play a vital role in
all NASA missions, providing crucial connections from space to Earth for crewed
and uncrewed missions alike. Using a blend of government and commercial assets,
NASA’s Near
Space and Deep Space Networks support science, technology demonstrations, and
human spaceflight missions across the solar system.
“This mission is more than a
technological milestone,” said Joel Parker, policy lead for positioning,
navigation, and timing at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland. “We want to enable more and better missions to the Moon for the benefit
of everyone, and we want to do it together with our international partners.”
“This mission is more than a technological milestone.
We want to enable more and better missions to the Moon for the benefit of
everyone…
JOEL PARKER
PNT Policy Lead at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
The data-gathering LuGRE payload
combines NASA-led systems engineering and mission management with receiver
software and hardware developed by the Italian Space Agency and their industry
partner Qascom — the first Italian-built hardware to operate on the lunar
surface.
Any data LuGRE collects is intended to open the door for use of GNSS to all lunar missions, not just those by NASA or the Italian Space Agency. Approximately six months after LuGRE completes its operations, the agencies will release its mission data to broaden public and commercial access to lunar GNSS research.
Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission One lander is
carrying 10 NASA science and technology instruments to the Moon as part of
NASA’s CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative and Artemis
campaign.
Firefly Aerospace
“A project like LuGRE isn’t about NASA alone,” said NASA Goddard navigation
and mission design engineer Lauren Konitzer. “It’s something we’re doing for
the benefit of humanity. We’re working to prove that lunar GNSS can work, and
we’re sharing our discoveries with the world.”
The LuGRE payload is one of 10
NASA-funded science experiments launching to the lunar surface on this delivery
through NASA’s CLPS initiative. Through CLPS, NASA works with American
companies to provide delivery and quantity contracts for commercial deliveries
to further lunar exploration and the development of a sustainable lunar
economy. As of 2024, the agency has 14 private partners on contract for current
and future CLPS missions.
Demonstrations like LuGRE could lay the groundwork for GNSS-based navigation systems on the lunar surface. Bridging these existing systems with emerging lunar-specific navigation solutions has the potential to define how all spacecraft navigate lunar terrain in the Artemis era.
Artist’s concept rendering of LuGRE aboard the Blue
Ghost lunar lander receiving signals from Earth’s GNSS constellations.
NASA/Dave Ryan
The payload is a collaborative effort between NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and the Italian Space Agency. Funding and oversight for the LuGRE payload comes from the agency’s SCaN Program office. It was chosen by NASA as one of 10 funded research and technology demonstrations for delivery to the lunar surface by Firefly Aerospace Inc, a flight under the agency’s CLPS initiative.
By: Korine Powers
Senior Writer and Education Lead
Source: NASA and Italian Space Agency Test Future Lunar Navigation Technology - NASA
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