Cape Times

Audi’s quattro shoots for the moon

Don’t expect to see one of these on the N1 any time soon

- DAVE ABRAHAMS

AUDI’S latest autonomous vehicle will be operating way, way offroad – 380 000km from the nearest tarmac, in fact.

The company has thrown the weight of its not inconsider­able experience in autonomous driving, as well as electric vehicles, behind the German-based Part-Time Scientists’ entry in the Google Lunar XPrize competitio­n to land an unmanned rover on the moon.

The competitio­n is an incentive to engineers and entreprene­urs from around the world to develop low-cost methods of robotic space exploratio­n.

To win the $30 million (R364 million) prize, a privately-funded team must successful­ly place a robot on the moon’s surface that explores at least 500 metres and transmits highdefini­tion video and images back to planet Earth.

Audi is helping the team with testing in the Austrian Alps and on Tenerife in the Canary Islands (the closest approximat­ion on earth to a lunar landscape) and the Audi concept design studio in Munich is revising the design – now officially called the Audi lunar quattro – to make it as light as possible without sacrificin­g durability. After all, it will be operating a long way away from the nearest Audi dealership.

The lunar quattro is mostly made of aluminium, with an adjustable solar panel that follows the sun to capture its energy and direct it to a lithium-ion battery, which feeds four electric wheel-hub motors. Theoretica­l top speed is 3.6km/h but, once again, Audi and the Part-Timers are more worried about its offroad capability and navigation ability.

Two stereo cameras (for 3D images) and a scientific camera to examine materials found on the lunar surface are mounted on the front of the chassis.

The lunar quattro has already won two Milestone prizes, awarded during earlier rounds of the competitio­n by a jury of aerospace experts and it is among the 15 entries – out of an original 25 – from Brazil, Canada, Chile, Hungary, Japan, Israel, Italy, Malaysia and the United States that have made it through to the finals.

The lunar lander containing the quattro is scheduled to be launched on a five-day, 380 000km trip to the moon in 2017; the target landing area is north of the moon’s equator, near the 1972 landing site of the Apollo 17, NASA’s last manned mission to the moon.

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