Thursday, April 5, 2012

Entrepreneurs Race to Get a Rover on the Moon and Win $30 Million (preview)

Feature Articles | Space Cover Image: April 2012 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

The next rover to roam the moon's surface may come not from NASA and its rocket scientists but from college students and private companies working on a shoestring


At a testing site in Pittsburgh, Red Whittaker and his teammates practice remotely controlling Red Rover, a pyramidal robot they hope to get on the moon by 2015. Image: Photograph by Andrew Hetherington

In Brief

  • Now that NASA?s space shuttle is retired, scientists may turn to privately funded rockets to get themselves and their equipment into space.
  • The Google Lunar X PRIZE competition offers $20 mil?lion to the first nongovernment team to get a rover on the moon.
  • Of the 26 competitors, Astrobotic may stand the best chance of winning. Team leader William ?Red? Whittaker has spent his career building innovative robots.

On a muddy, rubble-strewn field on the banks of the Monongahela River in Pittsburgh, a five-foot-tall pyra?midal robot with twin camera eyes slowly rotates on four metal wheels, its electric motors emitting a low whine. In a nearby trailer, students from Carnegie Mellon University huddle around a laptop to watch the world through the robot?s eyes. In the low-resolution grayscale images on the laptop?s screen, the rutted landscape looks a lot like the moon, which is the robot?s ultimate destination.


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