Quantcast Arizona Daily Wildcat

UofA Homepage | Webmail |

UA racing for the moon, $20 million

In international contest Team Astrobotic has until 2012 to get robot traveling on lunar surface

By: Ashley Waggoner

Issue date: 3/27/08 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
Michael Drake, left, director of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, and Dante Lauretta, an associate professor of planetary sciences, are leaders of a team of 30 students who are racing to get the first private robotic mission to the moon as part of the Google Lunar X PRIZE competition.
Michael Drake, left, director of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, and Dante Lauretta, an associate professor of planetary sciences, are leaders of a team of 30 students who are racing to get the first private robotic mission to the moon as part of the Google Lunar X PRIZE competition.

Science and Technology

The UA is in the midst of a $30 million international contest to get a spacecraft on the moon.

The UA was included among the first 10 teams announced last month to be participating in the Google Lunar X PRIZE competition, the first private robotic mission to the moon.

The UA's Team Astrobotic is a partnership of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, Carnegie Mellon University and the Raytheon Co.'s Tucson-based Missile Systems. Its funding is being provided by UA research funds.

The team consists of 30 students who are working with the spacecraft design and 20 engineers and managers. Each team is required to go to the moon, travel on its surface for at least 500 meters and send photos or video back to Earth.

UA students comprising the technical team will "purchase the rocket, build a landing platform and the rover and also build the cameras and antennae needed to send images back to earth," said Dante Lauretta, a deputy team leader and an associate professor in planetary sciences.

In addition to the requirements, Team Astrobotic's robotic lander is going to do a never-before-done precision landing, attempting to fall within 100 meters of a target zone.

The team will also pursue the heritage and distance prizes.

The heritage prize will entail imaging man-made artifacts at the Apollo 11 landing site where Neil Armstrong first walked on the moon in 1969.

For the distance prize, the team will attempt to get its lander to travel at least five kilometers on the moon's surface.

"I think it is a great educational opportunity for the students who are working with an actual spacecraft that will visit the moon," Lauretta said.

Other teams in the race include Micro-space,

Odyssey Moon, Lunatrex, Quantum3 and Team Italia out of Italy.

The first team to complete the mission by Dec. 31, 2012 will win a $20 million prize. The second team will win $5 million and other teams can win $5 million in bonus prizes. Google Inc. is providing the prize money.

After Dec. 31, 2012, the grand prize drops to $15 million. The deadline to win any prize money is Dec. 31, 2014.

Lauretta would not disclose what progress his team has made and any expected landing date but said "as soon as we have all the money, we will launch within 18 months of that date."
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Policy on posting: The Arizona Daily Wildcat would like to offer readers an opportunity to voice their opinions and engage in community conversation. However, readers should refrain from personal attacks or advertisements in their comments. When a reader chooses to participate in the Wilcat's online comments, they should be aware that all comments and postings do not reflect the views of the publication. Links referencing different sources for the sake of discussion are tolerated and encouraged, but comments and links that are posted only to advertise other sites will be deleted at the discretion of the Wildcat.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.


Advertisement

Podcast


Get connected with the Daily Wildcat's podcasts by clicking here.

Advertisement