Mission to the moon

Jon Lawson

MIT and Blue Origin have signed a memorandum outlining plans to pursue mutual interests in space exploration. MIT will develop one or more payload experiments to be launched aboard Blue Origin’s Blue Moon, a flexible lander delivering a variety of small, medium, and large payloads to the lunar surface.

 

MIT Apollo Professor of Astronautics and former NASA Deputy Director Dava Newman, who developed the agreement with Blue Origin, said that over the coming months, MIT researchers will invite input from the MIT community to help determine the nature of the flight opportunity experiment. “Some potential areas include smart habitats, rovers, life support and autonomous systems, human-machine interaction, science of the moon, lunar poles, sample return, and future astronaut performance and suit technologies,” Newman said.

Blue Origin’s business development director, A C Charania, has said the company’s lunar transportation program is its “first step to developing a lunar landing capability for the country, for other customers internationally, to be able to land multimetric tons on the lunar surface.” Blue Moon payloads could include science experiments, rovers, power systems, and sample return stages.

 

 

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