NASA Successfully Tests Water-Hunting Rover For Upcoming Moon Mission
KEY POINTS
- NASA has tested the new rover it will use for its Moon 2024 mission
- The VIPER rover will analyze water samples from the lunar surface
- The rover will help determine if living on the Moon is possible
NASA was able to successfully test the new rover that it will send to the Moon in a future exploration mission. According to the agency, the rover will hunt for water on the lunar surface, which is a valuable resource when it comes to living on the Moon.
NASA’s latest rover is called the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER). The rover’s engineering model is about as big as a golf cart.
Earlier this week, NASA sent VIPER to its Glen Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio to test its capabilities in navigating through the lunar surface. For the test, NASA used the center’s Simulated Lunar Operations Laboratory (SLOPE), a facility that has a large and adjustable soil bin.
Through SLOPE, NASA’s engineers were able to mimic the conditions of the Moon’s surface and terrain. It enabled them to evaluate the rover’s traction and wheels and to determine the power needed in order to navigate through the lunar surface. The laboratory also enabled the engineers to test how the rover fares against airborne silica.
If all goes well for NASA and VIPER, the rover will accompany the first female astronaut and her companion on their mission to the Moon in 2024 as part of the Artemis program. For the mission, the rover and the astronauts will explore the Moon’s South Pole to search for possible traces of ice water.
Through its onboard scientific instruments, VIPER will collect ice water samples and analyze them to see if the Moon has enough water to support future lunar missions. According to Daniel Andrews, the project manager for VIPER, finding water on the Moon would determine the possibility of establishing a human colony on the lunar surface.
“The key to living on the Moon is water -- the same as here on Earth,” he said in a statement. “Since the confirmation of lunar water-ice ten years ago, the question now is if the Moon could really contain the amount of resources we need to live off-world. This rover will help us answer the many questions we have about where the water is, and how much there is for us to use.”
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