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NASA to reveal moon landing site for ice-lunar rover today. Here’s how to follow it live.

We’ll finally learn the landing site location for an ice-hunting rover scout that will search for resources to support human moon landings.

- BY ELIZABETH HOWELL

NASA will host a media teleconfer­ence Monday (Sept. 20) at 4 p.m. EDT (2000 GMT) to discuss where in the moon’s south polar region private company Astrobotic will place the agency’s Volatiles Investigat­ing Polar Exploratio­n Rover (VIPER) in late 2023. It will launch on a Spacex Falcon Heavy rocket.

The event will stream on NASA TV. the agency’s Youtube channel and social media, as well as here at Space.com courtesy of NASA.

According to NASA, briefing participan­ts include:

-Lori Glaze, director of the Planetary Science Division, NASA Headquarte­rs

-Daniel Andrews, VIPER project manager, NASA Ames Research Center in California

-Anthony Colaprete, VIPER lead project scientist, Ames

-Darlene Lim, VIPER deputy lead project scientist, Ames

-Darryl Gaines, deputy manager, NASA Commercial Lunar Payload

-Services, NASA Johnson Space Center in Texas

VIPER will ride to the moon on a private lander built by Pittsburgh­based Astrobotic under NASA’S

Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. CLPS is meant to test out technology and to scout for lunar resources ahead of planned Artemis program human missions on the moon.

NASA is targeting 2024 for boots on the surface, but is running into technologi­cal, funding and lawsuit issues that could delay the effort. But whenever the crewed landings happen, VIPER will be useful because “it will get a close-up view of the location and concentrat­ion of ice and other resources,” NASA officials wrote in a statement Thursday (Sept. 16) advertisin­g the forthcomin­g announceme­nt.

The agency tapped Pennsylvan­ia’s Astrobotic in 2020 under a contract worth $199.5 million as a fixed-cost fee covering every aspect of launch and landing, the agency said at the time. Earlier this year, Astrobotic selected Spacex through a competitiv­e procuremen­t to launch the rover, using the Falcon Heavy rocket most famous for sending the “Starman” mannequin to space in a red Tesla Roadster.

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