This article contains promotional content .(November 2024) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Aerospace |
Founded | 2017 |
Founder | Justin Cyrus |
Headquarters | , |
Number of employees | 200 (2024) |
Website | www |
Lunar Outpost is a private space company headquartered in Arvada, Colorado, USA. It is an industry leader in the areas of space robotics, lunar surface mobility and space resources. The company has developed the Mobile Autonomous Prospecting Platform (MAPP) rover, and also holds a contract to develop a Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV) for the Artemis Program. [1]
The company was formed in 2017 and as of 2024 has multiple projects in progress including being one of three finalists to develop the Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV) for the Artemis Program. [2] Initially a partnership with Lockheed Martin, the company indicated in September 2024 that Leidos was replacing Lockheed-Martin on their Lunar Dawn LTV effort. [3] The company will also provide the Mobile Autonomous Prospecting Platform (MAPP) rover on the IM-2 mission in order to demonstrate ISRU on the lunar surface, the mission is scheduled for early 2025. [4] [5] On the IM-3 mission, the company will again provide a rover. [6]
The company operates offices across three continents, including North America, Europe, and Oceania.
The headquarters is located in Golden, Colorado, and serves as a hub for innovation and engineering. The facility includes a regolith simulant pit, which is used for testing platforms under conditions that simulate the lunar surface. Additionally, the Golden location houses state-of-the-art facilities for the design, manufacturing, and testing of lunar rovers, supporting the company’s mission to lead in autonomous mobility solutions for extraterrestrial environments.
Launching early 2025, Lunar Voyage 1 represents a significant milestone in space exploration, as it enables Nokia to establish the first cellular network on another planetary body. This mission is poised to achieve several historic firsts: being the first American rover to explore the lunar South Pole, the first commercial rover to operate on another planetary body, and completing the first sale of space resources in human history. [7] [8]
Launching 2025, Lunar Voyage 2 is focused on exploring Reiner Gamma, a lunar region known for its mysterious magnetic anomaly that has perplexed scientists for centuries. Conducted in collaboration with the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU APL) and NASA, this mission aims to investigate this unique feature of the lunar surface. The data collected from Lunar Voyage 2 is expected to shed light on the Moon's magnetic properties and contribute to a deeper understanding of the solar system's history. [8]
Launching 2026, Lunar Voyage 3 provides mobility solutions for scientific and commercial payloads, further expanding humanity’s knowledge of the Moon. The mission is being executed in partnership with Intuitive Machines, serving as the lander provider, and SpaceX, serving as the launch provider. By supporting payload mobility, this mission will enable a range of scientific discoveries and commercial advancements on the lunar surface. [8]
The Lunar Outpost Oceania Consortium is one of two teams selected to receive Stage 1 grant funding from the Australian Government’s Moon to Mars Trailblazer Initiative. This initiative, managed by the Australian Space Agency, aims to advance Australian contributions to space exploration through the development of remotely operated and autonomous robotic lunar technologies.
In Stage 1 of the initiative, the Consortium will design and develop a lunar rover tailored for the Moon’s unique environmental conditions. Leveraging Lunar Outpost’s expertise in autonomous lunar mobility and excavation, the rover will be capable of collecting lunar regolith for delivery to NASA’s in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) facility.
The ultimate goal of the project is for the Consortium to progress to Stage 2, culminating in NASA deploying an Australian-developed lunar rover to the Moon. The Trailblazer Initiative underscores Australia’s growing role in the global space exploration landscape, fostering innovation and international collaboration. [9]
The Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV) is an unpressurized lunar rover under development by NASA to support the Artemis program's goal of returning humans to the Moon and establishing a sustainable presence. The LTV is designed to transport astronauts and cargo across the lunar surface, facilitating scientific research and exploration.
In April 2024, NASA selected three companies, including Lunar Outpost, to advance the development of the LTV, tasked with creating rover concepts capable of operating in the Moon's extreme environment, including its rugged terrain and temperature fluctuations. The LTV is expected to support missions starting with Artemis V, anticipated to launch no earlier than March 2030.
Lunar Outpost, leading the "Lunar Dawn" team, is collaborating with partners such as General Motors, The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Leidos, and MDA Space to develop a human-rated lunar rover. Their LTV aims to provide robust off-road capabilities, ensuring astronaut safety and mission success in the harsh lunar environment.
The development of the LTV is a critical component of NASA's Artemis program, which seeks to establish a sustainable human presence on the Moon and prepare for future missions to Mars. By leveraging commercial partnerships, NASA aims to enhance lunar mobility and expand the scope of human exploration beyond Earth. [10] [11] [12]
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has proposed several concept moonbases for achieving a permanent presence of humans on the Moon since the late 1950s. Research and exploration of the Moon have been a large focus of the organization since the Apollo program. NASA's peak budget was in 1964–1965, when it comprised 4% of all federal spending in service of the Apollo Moon landing project. Though lunar landings since the conclusion of the Apollo program in 1972 have ceased, interest in establishing a permanent habitation on the lunar surface or beyond low Earth orbit has remained steady. Recently, renewed interest in lunar landing has led to increased funding and project planning. NASA requested an increase in the 2020 budget of $1.6 billion, in order to make another crewed mission to the Moon under the Artemis program by 2025, followed by a sustained presence on the Moon by 2028. A crew was selected for the planned crewed mission, Artemis II, in April 2023.
Astrobotic Technology, Inc., commonly referred to as Astrobotic, is an American private company that is developing space robotics technology for lunar and planetary missions. It was founded in 2007 by Carnegie Mellon professor Red Whittaker and his associates with the goal of winning the Google Lunar X Prize. The company is based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Their first launch occurred on January 8, 2024, as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program. The launch carried the company's Peregrine lunar lander on board the first flight of the Vulcan Centaur rocket from Florida's Space Force Station LC-41. The mission was unable to reach the Moon for a soft or hard landing. On June 11, 2020, Astrobotic received a second contract for the CLPS program. NASA would pay Astrobotic US$199.5 million to take the VIPER rover to the Moon, targeting a landing in November 2024. In July 2024, NASA announced that VIPER had been cancelled.
Planetary Transportation Systems (PTS), formerly known as PTScientists and Part-Time Scientists, is a Berlin-based aerospace company. They developed the robotic lunar lander "ALINA" and seek to land on the Moon with it. They became the first German team to officially enter the Google Lunar X-Prize competition on June 24, 2009, but failed to reach the finals in 2017 for lack of a launch contract. During the summer of 2019, the company filed for bankruptcy, and the ALINA project was put on hold. In July 2021, PTS was selected with ArianeGroup to build ESA's ASTRIS kick-stage.
Lunar Flashlight was a low-cost CubeSat lunar orbiter mission to explore, locate, and estimate size and composition of water ice deposits on the Moon for future exploitation by robots or humans.
Blue Moon is a family of lunar landers and their associated infrastructure, intended to carry humans and cargo to the Moon, under development by a consortium led by Blue Origin and including Lockheed Martin, Draper, Boeing, Astrobotic, and Honeybee Robotics. Two versions of Blue Moon are under development: a robotic lander planned to land on the Moon in 2024, and a larger human lander planned to land a crew of four astronauts on the lunar surface for the NASA Artemis V mission in 2029.
Resource Prospector is a cancelled mission concept by NASA of a rover that would have performed a survey expedition on a polar region of the Moon. The rover was to attempt to detect and map the location of volatiles such as hydrogen, oxygen and lunar water which could foster more affordable and sustainable human exploration to the Moon, Mars, and other Solar System bodies.
Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) is a NASA program to hire companies to send small robotic landers and rovers to the Moon. Most landing sites are near the lunar south pole where they will scout for lunar resources, test in situ resource utilization (ISRU) concepts, and perform lunar science to support the Artemis lunar program. CLPS is intended to buy end-to-end payload services between Earth and the lunar surface using fixed-price contracts. The program achieved the first landing on the Moon by a commercial company in history with the IM-1 mission in 2024. The program was extended to add support for large payloads starting after 2025.
ispace Inc. is a publicly traded Japanese company developing robotic spacecraft and other technology to compete for both transportation and exploration mission contracts from space agencies and other private industries. ispace's mission is to enable its clients to discover, map, and use natural lunar resources.
Orbit Beyond, Inc., usually stylized as ORBITBeyond, is an aerospace company that builds technologies for lunar exploration. Its products include configurable delivery lunar landers with a payload capacity of up to 300 kg (660 lb), and rovers.
The Intuitive Machines Nova-C, or simply Nova-C, is a class of lunar landers designed by Intuitive Machines (IM) to deliver small payloads to the surface of the Moon. Intuitive Machines was one of three service providers awarded task orders in 2019 for delivery of NASA science payloads to the Moon. The IM-1 lunar lander, named Odysseus, was launched by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on 15 February 2024, reached lunar orbit on 21 February, and landed on the lunar surface on 22 February. This marked the inaugural Nova-C landing on the Moon and the first American spacecraft to perform a soft landing on the Moon in over 50 years. It is the first spacecraft to use methalox propulsion to navigate between the Earth and the Moon.
McCandless Lunar Lander, also known as the McCandless Lunar Delivery Service, is a concept for a robotic lunar lander proposed as one of the commercial cargo vehicles for NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS). The lander was proposed to NASA for funding by the aerospace company Lockheed Martin, and it is based on the successful Mars landers Phoenix and InSight.
The Artemis program is a Moon exploration program led by the United States' National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), formally established in 2017 via Space Policy Directive 1. It is intended to reestablish a human presence on the Moon for the first time since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972. The program's stated long-term goal is to establish a permanent base on the Moon to facilitate human missions to Mars.
VIPER is a lunar rover which was developed at the NASA Ames Research Center. Before the project was cancelled in 2024 the rover would have been tasked with prospecting for lunar resources in permanently shadowed areas of lunar south pole region, especially by mapping the distribution and concentration of water ice. The mission built on a previous NASA rover concept, the Resource Prospector, which had been cancelled in 2018.
The International Lunar Resources Exploration Concept (ILREC) was a proposed mission architecture under President George H. W. Bush's Space Exploration Initiative (SEI) by Kent Joosten, an engineer at Johnson Space Center. The plan would have used the help of international partners, mainly the Soviet Union, to assemble a lunar base and sustainable lunar transportation service.
First Lunar Outpost was a proposal for a crewed lunar mission that would have launched sometime in the 2010s. It was part of George H. W. Bush's Space Exploration Initiative. The main purpose of the proposal was to offer a much less expensive alternative to NASA's 90-day study from 1989 by a factor of US$30 billion. Although it did not gather much mainstream attention, NASA dedicated much time to assembling a detailed and thorough proposal. However, the entire Space Exploration Initiative was cancelled soon after the proposal's completion, and NASA closed the Office of Space Exploration in March 1993.
IM-2 is an upcoming lunar mission that will be carried out in January 2025 by Intuitive Machines for NASA's CLPS program, using a Nova-C lunar lander. The company named this lander Athena. The mission aims to uncover the presence and amount of lunar water ice using PRIME-1, which consists of a drill and mass spectrometer. The lander will carry a Micro Nova Hopper, a drone that will utilize its neutron spectrometer in the PSR of the nearby Marston crater. If successful, this would provide the first measurement of hydrogen on the surface in the PSR, a key indicator of water.
The Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV) is an unpressurized rover being developed for NASA that astronauts can drive on the Moon while wearing their spacesuits. The development of the LTV is a part of NASA's Artemis Program, which involves returning astronauts to the Moon, specifically the lunar south pole, by 2026, but the LTV will not fly until Artemis V in 2030 at the earliest. The LTV will be the first crewed lunar rover developed by NASA since the Lunar Roving Vehicle used during the Apollo program.
Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration (SIMPLEx) is a planetary exploration program operated by NASA. The program funds small, low-cost spacecraft for stand-alone planetary exploration missions. These spacecraft are intended to launch as secondary payloads on other missions and are riskier than Discovery or New Frontiers missions.
Firefly Aerospace Blue Ghost, or simply Blue Ghost, is a class of lunar landers designed and manufactured by Firefly Aerospace (Firefly). Firefly plans to operate Blue Ghost landers to deliver small payloads to the surface of the Moon. The first Blue Ghost mission is scheduled for launch in 2024.