This artist’s concept shows Blue Origin’s Blue Moon
Mark 1 lander and NASA’s VIPER (Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration
Rover) on the lunar surface.
Credit: Blue Origin
As part of the agency’s Artemis campaign, NASA has awarded Blue Origin of
Kent, Washington, a CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) task order with an
option to deliver a rover to the Moon’s South Pole region. NASA’s VIPER
(Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover) will search for volatile
resources, such as ice, on the lunar surface and collect science data to
support future exploration at the Moon and Mars.
“NASA is leading the world in
exploring more of the Moon than ever before, and this delivery is just one of
many ways we’re leveraging U.S. industry to support a long-term American
presence on the lunar surface,” said acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy. “Our
rover will explore the extreme environment of the lunar South Pole, traveling
to small, permanently shadowed regions to help inform future landing sites for
our astronauts and better understand the Moon’s environment – important
insights for sustaining humans over longer missions, as America leads our
future in space.”
The CLPS task order has a total
potential value of $190 million. This is the second CLPS lunar delivery awarded
to Blue Origin. Their first delivery – using their Blue Moon Mark 1 (MK1)
robotic lander – is targeted for launch later this year to deliver NASA’s Stereo Cameras for Lunar-Plume Surface Studies and Laser Retroreflective Array payloads to the Moon’s South Pole region.
With this new award, Blue Origin
will deliver VIPER to the lunar surface in late 2027, using a second Blue Moon
MK1 lander, which is in production. NASA previously canceled the VIPER project and has since explored alternative approaches to achieve the agency’s goals of mapping
potential off-planet resources, like water.
“NASA is committed to studying and
exploring the Moon, including learning more about water on the lunar surface,
to help determine how we can harness local resources for future human
exploration,” said Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate,
NASA Headquarters in Washington. “We’ve been looking for creative,
cost-effective approaches to accomplish these exploration goals. This private
sector-developed landing capability enables this delivery and focuses our
investments accordingly – supporting American leadership in space and ensuring
our long-term exploration is robust and affordable.”
The task order, called CS-7, has an
award base to design the payload-specific accommodations and to demonstrate how
Blue Origin’s flight design will off-load the rover to the lunar surface. There
is an option on the contract to deliver and safely deploy the rover to the
Moon’s surface. NASA will make the decision to exercise that option after the
execution and review of the base task and of Blue Origin’s first flight of the
Blue Moon MK1 lander. This unique approach will reduce the agency’s cost and
technical risk. The rover has a targeted science window for its 100-day mission
that requires a landing by late 2027.
Blue Origin is responsible for the
complete landing mission architecture and will conduct design, analysis, and
testing of a large lunar lander capable of safely delivering the lunar
volatiles science rover to the Moon. Blue Origin also will handle end-to-end
payload integration, planning and support, and post-landing payload deployment
activities. NASA will conduct rover operations and science planning.
“The search for lunar volatiles
plays a key role in NASA’s exploration of the Moon, with important implications
for both science and human missions under Artemis,” said Joel Kearns, deputy
associate administrator for exploration, Science Mission Directorate, NASA
Headquarters. “This delivery could show us where ice is most likely to be found
and easiest to access, as a future resource for humans. And by studying these
sources of lunar water, we also gain valuable insight into the distribution and
origin of volatiles across the solar system, helping us better understand the
processes that have shaped our space environment and how our inner solar system
has evolved.”
Through CLPS, American companies
continue to demonstrate leadership in commercial space advancing capabilities
and accomplishing NASA’s goal for a commercial lunar economy. NASA’s Ames
Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley led the VIPER rover development
and will lead its science investigations, and NASA’s Johnson Space Center in
Houston provided rover engineering development for Ames.
To learn more about CLPS and Artemis, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/clps
Source: NASA Selects Blue Origin to Deliver VIPER Rover to Moon’s South Pole - NASA
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