The Denver Post

The lunar the better

Las Vegas millionair­e joins rocketing efforts to get the U.S. back to the moon

- By Christian Davenport

The moon — that cold, gray outpost that NASA last visited 45 years ago — is hot again.

The vice president says so. As do Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. And as the Trump administra­tion sets its sights on the lunar surface, a growing number of companies say they are ready for the challenge.

The latest is Bigelow Aerospace, the Las Vegas-based maker of inflatable space habitats. In an announceme­nt Tuesday, the company said it is hoping to send one of its space stations to lunar orbit by 2022 in partnershi­p with United Launch Alliance, the joint venture of Lockheed Martin and Boeing.

Bigelow, run by multimilli­onaire Robert Bigelow, the founder of Budget Suites of America, has spent hundreds of millions of dollars developing space habitats made from Kevlar-like material that are inflated once in space. One of its smaller habitats, known as the BEAM, is currently attached to the internatio­nal space station, where it has been tested for months.

Now, Bigelow Aerospace proposes sending a much larger version — the B330 — into lunar orbit. If NASA goes for it, the $2.3 billion mission would go something like this: The habitat would launch on ULA’s Vulcan rocket into low Earth orbit, where it would stay for a period of months, receiving supplies and cargo, while it underwent testing to make sure everything was working properly.

Then a space tug would ferry it from Earth orbit to lunar orbit, where it would become a space station for the moon.

In laying out his plan during an interview Tuesday, Bigelow said he was well aware of the political and industry implicatio­ns in such a mission. The Trump administra­tion is looking for a first-term coup, and, he said, this “can actually be done within one ad- ministrati­on.”

NASA also needs a destinatio­n for the Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft it has been developing for years and at great expense, he said.

While the ULA would launch the B330, Musk’s SpaceX could resupply it while in Earth orbit, Bigelow said.

Bezos’ Blue Origin has said it is developing a lunar lander that could ferry supplies to the surface of the moon.

Other companies are interested as well. Moon Express says it plans on sending a lunar lander to the moon by next year. Astrobotic and Masten Space Systems are also working with NASA to develop vehicles that could touch down on the surface.

And during a recent speech, Vice President Mike Pence vowed to “return American astronauts to the moon, not only to leave behind footprints and flags, but to build the foundation we need to send Americans to Mars and beyond.”

All of which adds up to a growing momentum for a return to the moon since Eugene Cernan became the last man to walk on the lunar surface in 1972.

“We don’t want to see another 45 years go by,” Bigelow said. “Something needs to happen.”

 ?? NASA ?? Apollo 17 astronaut Eugene Cernan takes NASA’s lunar roving vehicle out for a spin in 1972. The trip to the moon marked the last manned lunar mission. Forty-five years later, momentum is growing for humans to return.
NASA Apollo 17 astronaut Eugene Cernan takes NASA’s lunar roving vehicle out for a spin in 1972. The trip to the moon marked the last manned lunar mission. Forty-five years later, momentum is growing for humans to return.
 ?? Rendering provided by United Launch Alliance ?? Bigelow Aerospace proposes sending the B330 – a larger version of its habitat, called the BEAM – into lunar orbit.
Rendering provided by United Launch Alliance Bigelow Aerospace proposes sending the B330 – a larger version of its habitat, called the BEAM – into lunar orbit.

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