First 10 Teams in $30M Google Lunar X Prize Announced 87
coondoggie writes to mention that the first ten teams racing for the $30 million Google Lunar X Prize have been announced. The competitors will try to be the first team to land a privately funded robotic spacecraft on the moon capable of traveling at least 1,600 feet and returning video, images, and data. The teams include Romanian-based ARCA, Italy-based Team Italia, and several different teams from around the US, many of which competed in the Ansari X Prize.
Oh no! (Score:3, Funny)
Of course they'll win, too (Score:2)
Much better challenge (Score:5, Insightful)
I fear, however, that $30m isn't nearly enough to cover the budget for a lunar mission, even if someone does end up winning the prize.
Re:Much better challenge (Score:5, Insightful)
$30 million is also a good excuse for rich people to compete.
JFK would be pissed (Score:1, Insightful)
It really is piss poor what Bush has done to science. Bushs' vision of mars is nothing but a political tool to get temporary ratings approval in the polls. Fact is, his vision is severely underfunded, uninspired, and uneducated. Nasa has done some great things with the tools they have. But when you compare Bushs' failed war in iraq and afghanistan and the funds i
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now we have nothing but bloat and underfunding.
Bloat and underfunding? Aren't those two a contradiction in terms?
It really is piss poor what Bush has done to science. Bushs' vision of mars is nothing but a political tool to get temporary ratings approval in the polls. Fact is, his vision is severely underfunded, uninspired, and uneducated.
I dislike Bush as much as any other Democrat, but, to be brutally honest, every administration past LBJ has underfunded the space program. NASA has been suffering from decades of neglect, and its unfair to put all the blame on the current occupant.
Imagine if we took that trillion dollar surplus and some real inspiration and dedicated 400 billion to the space program instead of way. A good president would cut out the bureaucracy (with still keeping quality assurance) and size down Nasa's management, and their space vehicles (last time i checked we are using 30+ year old shuttle technology, what exactly is going to happen again when the shuttle retires? There is no clear cut plan, also sad).
Again, every administration since LBJ has promised to set up a vision for NASA and return to its Apollo-era glory days. And, predictably, NASA has fallen far down the priority list as oth
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Re:Much better challenge (Score:4, Informative)
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The real prize is the prestige of winning it, or even just competing. The actual monetary prize is just a token.
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maybe not (Score:5, Insightful)
What presumably is the point to these new prizes is not the achievement per se, which merely duplicates something done forty years ago, but the goal of doing so much more cheaply, and with the ability to do it much more routinely. Those are reasonable goals: after all, the principal failure of the Space Shuttle is that it can't be launched nearly as often and easily as it was supposed to be. If it had eventually been able to fly 20 times a year to LEO on a routine basis, which was what was promised in the 80s, and which would've brought its per-flight cost down to an extremely modest $60-100 million, we would be now hailing its unqualified success.
So I think the virtue of the X Prize was not its goal of suborbital flight per se, but the goal of suborbital flight with the same craft twice in a short period (a week, as I recall). Doing it rapidly is at least proof of concept evidence that you've found a way to do it cheaply and routinely. And I'm disappointed that this new competition doesn't seem to have that element. I'm not sure how it could. Maybe they would have been better off going for a similar X Prize competition for actual orbital flight, e.g. can you fly to orbit twice in the same week. That would be a real achievement.
I fear, however, that $30m isn't nearly enough to cover the budget for a lunar mission
It's a totally token amount. Merely launching a geostationary satellite on an Ariane 5 rocket costs over $100 million. Presumably if you compete seriously you're in it for the glory.
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Calling the X-15 (mach 7 or so, 4K mph) suborbital is really a stretch. A few of the pilots got astronaut wings from it, but that doesn't make it much more suborbital than SR-71 pilots. The Nazi WW II V-2 was more suborbital than the X-15, and that was 1942.
You also ought to mention the Soviets, who were orbital before the US was suborbital.
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Maybe you are confusing speed with altitude. You could have orbital velocity at ground level, that wouldn't make the craft an orbiter. To reach orbit or sub-orbit may require a certain speed (physics and all that) but it's not the principal definition, the trajectory is.
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No, but you're confusing orbit - a special state of being in freefall - with altitude.
Yes, it would. It would make the entity which achieved that speed orbit the Earth, therefore making it an orbiter. Of course an orbit at ground level is not stable, due to air friction, but it is an orbit nonetheless.
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The V-2 doesn't qualify at all, because it didn't carry passengers.
I probably should have mentioned the Soviets, except that I
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The V-2 qualifies for everything except the X prize. "Suborbital" certainly doesn't care whether it has passengers aboard. ICBMS are suborbital, far more than the X-15 or any X-prize contender.
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I suggest the natural understanding of "suborbital" flight is flight which goes very high, pretty much out of the atmosphere, but which isn't up to orbital velocity. By that definition the X-15 qualifies, and so does SS1. The SR-71 does not, and as an air-breather is really in an entirely different category.
Any IRBM or IC
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There's a basic cost to a launch that includes building a big thingy full of explosive fuel, maintaining a safe place to launch it, hiring all the trained people you need to oversee everything, filling in the government forms, paying for radar and radio operators and
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$40 million doesn't buy you a "massive" rocket any more. You need to multiply by 2 to 4 just for something that can park a few tons in LEO or geostationary orbit. And even that doesn't really qualify as a "massive" rocket by, say, Saturn V standards.
It's all about delta-V and mass fractions.
I don't think so. That was part of the thinking behind the Space Shuttle, why it was designed as a combination heavy-lift vehic
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What costs the money is the standing army you need for a launch crew (including vehicle assembly crew, etc). The propellants are cheap, and even the hardware isn't that expensive, especially if yo
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On the main subject...if this were 1975 it would sound like you're arguing for the Space Shuttle. As it is...what are you arguing, e.g. for or against Constellation?
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Personally I'd rather see something fully reusable, by which I don't mean crash'n'salvage like the SRBs. Ideally a VTOVL SSTO if they can do it (don't give me "physically impo
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Some folks have been speculating [spacefellowship.com] that it might be possible to use a $6 million SpaceX Falcon 1 [wikipedia.org] to get 213kg of mass to the moon. Of course, you still have to worry about landing that mass and the rover itself, which may
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That seems unrealistic. When JPL designs and builds rovers for NASA, they typically spend $100 million or so. I mean, when you design something that has to do stuff while being incredibly tiny to save on launch weight, it ends
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Just for starters, what the hell will they use for comms? I can't see NASA renting out slots on the alr
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In your opinion. As I see it, it's opened the way for not only more prizes, but also substantial development of space tourism. We'll see if the current effort lasts, but as I see it, there's a good chance that the X-Prize marks the start of real space development and exploration.
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Actually, these are about the same. (Score:2)
Most no-one thinks the Google Lunar X-Prize will be won.. and that's just soft-landing a rover on the Moon by 2015. [slashdot.org]
Hummmm. Everybody swore that America's space prize was un-winnable. And yet, I think that Musk will win it, with the remote possibility that several others could still do
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I'm sure Musk's Dragon [wikipedia.org] has the technical capability to win the prize, but I think they might not qualify due to the government funding SpaceX has received from NASA COTS. Of course, regardless of the prize, I'm sure Musk is eying Bigelow's private space stations as a large potential market for his spacecraft.
My prediction: Musk wins the
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Sure, but it seems that there's almost as much prestige (especially to potential customers) in being the launcher of for the winning team, without the risk of accidentally picking the wrong horse. Also, I'm not sure how much SpaceX's expertise actually gets them with regards to the lander/rover...
But in this case, I think that musk will team up just to try and make a serviceable flight stack to the moon.
That's possibl
Re:Much better challenge (Score:5, Informative)
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I'm disappointed that there's no UK team (Score:3, Funny)
You don't need a parachute to land on the moon, don't let the failure of that Mars thingy stop you
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(apologies to Eddie Izzard)
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Which makes me realize that with todays technology, if we ever land a man on a planet large enough to sustain an earth-like atmosphere, the chances of ever having them return is nil.
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Nonsense, we've done it a few times already. For example, Gordon Cooper flew in space for over 34 hours, landed on a planet large enough to sustain a very earth-like atmosphere, and returned to space just over two years later, spending another 8 days in space before landing on Earth. Granted, he did have the help of some of the local inhabitants to get back into space again, an
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Well? (Score:2, Interesting)
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Personally, I think it'd be quite interesting to see them partner up with someone else, focusing on the lander while somebody else constructs the rover. From their FAQ:
http://www.armadilloaerospace.com/n.x/Armadillo/Home/FAQ#lunarXPrize [armadilloaerospace.com]
Do you plan to compete in the recently-announced Google Lunar X Prize?
We've discussed it and have considered approaches for it, but we have no firm plans at this time. We have a lot of other things to think about at the moment, and getting to the moon is further down that list.
They're just doing it (Score:5, Funny)
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I'm in!
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First, you know the topology of the area, which I would imagine would be helpful in designing the rover and lander. You know you won't have to deal with going up big hills or anything like that.
Second, and more mercurial, I'd imagine pictures and video of the Apollo 11 landing site would fetch a pretty penny. You could probably sell exclusive broadcast rights and such for a few extra million.
moon.google.com (Score:1)
Where's Cringely?!? (Score:2)
He promised!
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Also, the part in Cringely's column which talks about him seems to be a copy/paste job from an article about "Orbital Outfitters", a "new company to provide next generation space suits" [spacefellowship.com].
This is the spacefellowship.com version from 2006:
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http://www.teamcringely.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page [teamcringely.org]
That's a lot of information for a web page, but not very much at all for a moon mission. Since they don't even have their act together to get registered, I wonder if they have already given up.
Goal? (Score:1)
Re:Goal? (Score:5, Interesting)
I doubt that anyone will be trying to develop their own launch vehicle to do this, although a custom trans-lunar injection stage might be in the cards. One of the upcoming Falcon 1-extended versions may have the juice to get a small but capable rover to the lunar surface, bringing this reasonably within cost restrictions.
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2) Get it to the moon (the ????)
3) Profit
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For the competitors, prestige, experience, publicity.
Where's the Armadillo? (Score:1)
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Lunar Streetview (Score:1)
If NASA couldn't do it (Score:1, Flamebait)
It's going to be a lot harder to fake this one.
Looks like... (Score:1)
This could be fun (Score:1)
My laptop probably has more computing power than that first mission did, so it can't be impossible to put a robot on the moon with today's hardware. I honestly think the only expensive part of the project will be the costs of fuel and contracting the production of various parts. This mission doesn't have to have the large amount of safety features the lunar mission did, since we aren't ca
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Things that, off the top of my head, may still be on that list could be communication/tracking (large antenna arrays are expensive and st
No, the biggest cost is always lawyers etc (Score:2)
Wrong. In the 60's hardware/development was the big cost, but these days it is ALWAYS insurance and covering your legal butt. That will be the biggest cost, guaranteed. If you rocket screws up and hits a metro area, well, you have to have a pretty big policy to cover that. And some good defense lawyers.
That's no moon (Score:2, Insightful)
Join the GLXP teams (Score:4, Interesting)