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NASA chooses 4 firms for first private lunar sample collection
by Paul Brinkmann
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 03, 2020

NASA buying Moon dust for $1
Washington (AFP) Dec 3, 2020 - The US space agency NASA awarded contracts to four companies on Thursday to collect lunar samples for $1 to $15,000, rock-bottom prices that are intended to set a precedent for future exploitation of space resources by the private sector.

"I think it's kind of amazing that we can buy lunar regolith from four companies for a total of $25,001," said Phil McAlister, director of NASA's Commercial Spaceflight Division.

The contracts are with Lunar Outpost of Golden, Colorado for $1; ispace Japan of Tokyo for $5,000; ispace Europe of Luxembourg for $5,000; and Masten Space Systems of Mojave, California for $15,000.

The companies plan to carry out the collection during already scheduled unmanned missions to the Moon in 2022 and 2023.

The firms are to collect a small amount of lunar soil known as regolith from the Moon and to provide imagery to NASA of the collection and the collected material.

Ownership of the lunar soil will then be transferred to NASA and it will become the "sole property of NASA for the agency's use under the Artemis program."

Under the Artemis program, NASA plans to land a man and a woman on the Moon by 2024 and lay the groundwork for sustainable exploration and an eventual mission to Mars.

"The precedent is a very important part of what we're doing today," said Mike Gold, NASA's acting associate administrator for international and interagency relations.

"We think it's very important to establish the precedent that the private sector entities can extract, can take these resources but NASA can purchase and utilize them to fuel not only NASA's activities, but a whole new dynamic era of public and private development and exploration on the Moon," Gold said.

"We must learn to generate our own water, air and even fuel," he said. "Living off the land will enable ambitious exploration activities that will result in awe inspiring science and unprecedented discoveries."

Any lessons learned on the Moon would be crucial to an eventual mission to Mars.

"Human mission to Mars will be even more demanding and challenging than our lunar operations, which is why it's so critical to learn from our experiences on the Moon and apply those lessons to Mars," Gold said.

"We want to demonstrate explicitly that you can extract, you can utilize resources, and that we will be conducting those activities in full compliance with the Outer Space Treaty," he said. "That's the precedent that's important. It's important for America to lead, not just in technology, but in policy."

The United States is seeking to establish a precedent because there is currently no international consensus on property rights in space and China and Russia have not reached an understanding with the United States on the subject.

The 1967 Outer Space Treaty is vague but it deems outer space to be "not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means."

Four companies will collect moon rocks and dust on the lunar surface for NASA by 2023 in preparation for a human mission the following year, the space agency announced Thursday.

The missions would be the first time a private company has collected samples from another planetary body, and the first time ownership of an object would be transferred beyond Earth orbit, according to NASA.

The companies are Lunar Outpost, based near Denver; ispace Japan of Tokyo; Luxembourg-based ispace Europe and Masten Space Systems, of Mojave, Calif. All four are planning to fly equipment to the moon on missions already planned.

The sample missions are intended only to provide a "proof of concept" to show NASA how a private company would collect samples. The missions also will test a legal framework for turning over ownership of such samples on the moon, said Phil McAlister, the agency's director of commercial spaceflight development.

NASA may never retrieve the samples once they are collected on the surface, McAlister said.

"It is to be determined how we will collect that material," he said. "At this point, we don't have plans for how we will take physical possession."

NASA simply wanted to set a precedent for such collection of samples under the international Outer Space Treaty, which allows nations to extract resources on objects in space, but doesn't allow claiming ownership of territory, said Mike Gold, NASA's acting associate administrator for international and interagency relations.

"It's very important that we resolve any legal or regulatory questions in advance, because we never want policy or regulation to slow down or hinder incredible innovations and developments that we're seeing," Gold said.

Gold said he didn't have examples of such questions, but added that the process might reveal possible legal issues.

Lunar Outpost, founded in 2017, is an aerospace company that focuses on technology to enable an extended presence on the lunar surface. The company plans to get to the moon on the Blue Moon lander, a contender for NASA's human lander program planned by Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin space firm, McAlister said.

Lunar Outpost, which has other contracts with NASA, requested the sample collection contract for just $1, according to NASA.

The contracts for ispace Japan, and its subsidiary ispace Europe, are for $5,000 each. They plan to ride on Japan's planned Hakuto-R lunar lander.

Masten will get to the moon on its own Masten XL-1 lander, which is part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, for an additional $15,000 contract.

The ispace Japan mission will seek to land on Lacus Somniorum, a plain on the moon's northeastern near side. The other three will target sites near the lunar South Pole, where NASA plans its future human landings.

The companies are charged with collecting a small amount -- from about 2 ounces to a little over a pound -- of rocky and dusty lunar soil, or regolith. They then would provide NASA with images of the collected material, along with data that identifies the location.

After NASA receives the information, the company would legally sign over sample ownership to the space agency.

NASA's Artemis program would land astronauts on the moon by 2024, as outlined by the Trump administration. President-elect Joe Biden has not stated space goals.


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MOON DAILY
VIPER's Many Brains are Better than One
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 03, 2020
If you opened up a robot vacuum, a self-driving car, or even one of NASA's Mars rovers (which we're definitely not recommending you do!) you'd find a bunch of processors programmed with software that serve as the robot's "brains." All robots have these computerized brains directing their movement and activity, but NASA's Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover, or VIPER, will be the first off-world rover to have its brains split in two as it explores the Moon's surface in search of water ice. ... read more

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