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MOON DAILY
Space startup confirms plans for robotic moon landings
by Marilyn Malara
Mountain View, Calif. (UPI) Oct 3, 2015


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

California-based space exploration startup Moon Express has signed a deal with Rocket Lab to commence a series of lunar launches starting in 2017.

CEO Bob Richards announced the partnership between his company, known as MoonEx, and the lab on Thursday. The contract marks the beginning stages of three consecutive robotic lunar landings set to take place two years from now. The company's goal is to win the $30 million Google Lunar X Prize for being the first private company to do so.

"Getting to the moon is really hard," Richards told Popular Mechanics. "We wanted to be in a situation where we weren't just an all-in-one-basket mission because, hey, things happen. Landing on the moon the first time would be fantastic, but we want to have some backup plans and to be able to try it again and then try it again."

MoonEx has already partnered with NASA's Innovative Lunar Demonstration Data Program and Google's Lunar X Prize competition to further develop its MX-1 vehicle for a moon landing.

The latter tech giant is offering $30 million to the first private company to land on and effectively explore the moon through surface travel and high-definition recordings. MoonEx has already been awarded over $1 million from Google and $500,000 from NASA in support of its research.

The Mountain View, Calif., startup was founded by entrepreneurs Naveen Jain, Bob Richards and Barney Bell in 2010. Its goal is to successfully begin mining the Moon's surface for resources such as PT-78, Helium and other rare earth metals, deeming the orbiting mass the "eighth continent."


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Previous Report
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Asteroids found to be the moon's main 'water supply'
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Oct 02, 2015
Water reserves found on the moon are the result of asteroids acting as "delivery vehicles" and not of falling comets as was previously thought. Using computer simulation, scientists from MIPT and the RAS Geosphere Dynamics Institute have discovered that a large asteroid can deliver more water to the lunar surface than the cumulative fall of comets over a billion year period. Their research is di ... read more


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