NASA awards contracts to three companies to land payloads on the moon

WASHINGTON — NASA announced May 31 the award of more than $250 million in contracts to three companies to deliver NASA payloads to the lunar surface by 2021.

The agency said it awarded contracts to Astrobotic, Intuitive Machines and OrbitBeyond to carry up to 23 payloads to the moon on three commercial lunar lander missions scheduled for launch between September 2020 and July 2021. The three companies were selected for these task orders from the nine companies that received Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) awards in November 2018.

“Today, NASA becomes a customer of commercial partners who will deliver our science instruments and our lunar technology to the surface of the moon,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said in a recorded statement during an agency webcast about the announcement.

OrbitBeyond is the first of the three scheduled to fly, with the company currently planning to launch its Z-01 lander on a SpaceX Falcon 9 in Septmber 2020. The New Jersey-based company, which has ties to India’s TeamIndus, a former Google Lunar X Prize team, received $97 million from NASA to fly up to four payloads on a lander scheduled to touch down on Mare Imbrium.

Astrobotic plans to launch its Peregrine lander in June 2021, landing in July. The company had previously announced plans to fly the payload as a secondary payload on a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5, but John Thornton, chief executive of Astrobotic, said on the NASA webcast that the company was “assessing our launch options and making a decision very shortly.” The company received $79.5 million for carrying up to 14 payloads to the crater Lacus Mortis.

Intuitive Machines plan to launch its Nova-C lander on a Falcon 9 in July 2021, landing on the moon six and a half days later. The Houston-based company received $77 million to carry up to four payloads on its lander, which will touch down on Oceanus Procellarum or Mare Serenitatis.

NASA hasn’t disclosed what payloads it will fly on each mission, although it selected a dozen payloads from within the agency in February for potential flight on CLPS missions. In a statement, NASA said it will manifest specific payloads on each mission by the end of the summer.

“Those experiments are focused primarily first on volatiles, like water,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA associate administrator for science, in the NASA webcast. Other areas of interest focus on the geology of the moon and its environment, including those that help prepare for future human missions under the agency’s Artemis program.

“We really want to go land there first, with robots,” he said of the agency’s exploration plans. “We want to go explore where we want to land with our fellow humans and be ready for that.”

NASA has targeted the south pole of the moon for the first lunar landings. None of the companies selected in these CLPS contracts have plans to land on the moon with those initial missions, but future missions could land near the south pole.

NASA plans to award additional CLPS missions in the future, Zurbuchen said, but didn’t give a timetable for doing so.

source: spacenews.com