Houston Chronicle

Houston firms get NASA funding

- By Andrea Leinfelder

NASA is providing funding to a moon-hopping robot and mini laboratory being developed in Houston.

Intuitive Machines is receiving $41.6 million to develop a robot that can hop into craters and photograph hard-to-reach crevices that might be worthy of exploratio­n. Alpha Space Test and Research Alliance is receiving $22.1 million to develop a shoe box-sized facility where potential lunar technologi­es will be tested against themoon’s dust and harsh radiation.

Both companies are working toward NASA’s goal of creating long-term, sustainabl­e operations on the moon. And they were among the 14 U.S. companies selected Wednesday to receive $370 million through NASA’s Tipping Point solicitati­on, which provides funding for technologi­es on the cusp of maturation that could be brought to market for government and commercial uses.

“This is the most Tipping Point proposals NASA has selected at once and by far the largest collec--

tive award value,” NASA Associate Administra­tor for Space Technology Jim Reuter said in a news release. “We are excited to see our investment­s and collaborat­ive partnershi­ps bring about new technologi­es for the moon and beyond while also benefiting the commercial sector.”

The majority of the funding, $256.1 million, is for inspace demonstrat­ions of cryogenic fluid management technologi­es. The ability to store super-cold liquids — whether they are launched from Earth or produced in space — for an extended period and to transfer the propellant from one tank to another will be crucial for sustainabl­e operations on the moon, according to the news release. Fu

ture missions could use frozen water from the moon’s poles to make fuel by separating the hydrogen and oxygen.

Intuitive Machines’ hopper will be like a lander within a lander. The company’s Nova-C lander is being developed to carry commercial cargo and NASAprovid­ed payloads to the lunar surface, with its first mission slated to launch in the fourth quarter of 2021. On subsequent missions, the navigation system that guides Nova-Cto themoon’s surface will break away from the lander and become the hopper. The company’s demonstrat­ion mission for NASA, which could launch as early as 2022, will be capable of carrying a 2.2 pound payload more than 1.5 miles. It will hop into a crater unreachabl­e by a rover and take pictures.

To help create a sus

tained presence on the moon, the yet-to-be-named hopper (which will be the size of a carry-on suit case) could scout broad areas in search of scientific­ally interestin­g regions, ice that could be turned into rocket fuel or drinking water, and places suitable for human habitation.

“This allows you to hop and travel a kilometer away from the lander,” said Steve Altemus, president and CEO of Intuitive Machines. “Then hop a second time or a third time and explore much farther away from the lander than a typical rover can do.”

For Alpha Space, its Space Science Test and Evaluation Facility is a proving ground for companies. It will be mounted onto a lander and allow organizati­ons to test versions of their technology in the harsh lunar environmen­t prior to

launching a finished product into space.

“You’ll have proof that your technology operates well on the moon,” said Mark Shumbera, director of business developmen­t for Alpha Space. “It’s going to greatly expand the number and types of technologi­es that will be available for use in the Artemis program and beyond.”

Alpha Space also owns a testing platform attached to the outside of the Internatio­nal Space Station, and the company is developing a payload that will be launched to the moon prior to the mini-lab to expose materials to lunar dust. Alpha Space will use technology and what it learns from these two assets to develop laboratory.

 ?? Leroy Chiao / Courtesy ?? NASA astronaut Leroy Chiao photograph­s the moon from the Internatio­nal Space Station in 2004.
Leroy Chiao / Courtesy NASA astronaut Leroy Chiao photograph­s the moon from the Internatio­nal Space Station in 2004.

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