Posted on 07/27/2020 4:16:24 PM PDT by BenLurkin
The public challenge called for people to design instruments that could one day be tiny payloads for future missions to the moon. And on July 14, JPL announced the miniature winners.
This challenge was inspired by a need to reduce the amount of payload weight for future missions, as big, heavy payloads require a lot of fuel (and, therefore, money) to get from Earth to the moon.
By developing tiny payloads, researchers can work using smaller (and often more mobile) platforms that would cost less to launch, making that research more accessible. The challenge called for payloads no larger than about the size of a bar of soap: payloads no larger than 4 inches by 4 inches by 2 inches (10 centimeters by 10 centimeters by 5 centimeters) that weigh no more than 0.8 lbs. (0.4 kilograms).
The winning design for one category in the challenge, called "Lunar Resource Potential," was "Puli Lunar Water Snooper," designed by the Budapest, Hungary-based Puli Space Technologies Team, which garnered a prize of $30,000. The instrument is designed to map hydrogen on the moon from a small rover to aid in the search for water ice.
In another category, "Lunar Environment," the design known as "Sun Slicer," a miniaturized X-ray spectrometer by Team Sun Slicer, won, also taking home a $30,000 prize.
(Excerpt) Read more at space.com ...
*ping*
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