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Space
Space
Science
Joanna Thompson

Students set to land first robotic US rover on the moon — before NASA

Artist's illustration shows the Orion spacecraft above the surface of the moon with Earth in the distance.

After 65 years of lunar exploration, the United States is finally going to put its first autonomous rover on the moon. But this mission won't be helmed by NASA engineers — instead, it is the brainchild of a dedicated group of college students.

The Iris rover was developed by students, faculty and alumni at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania over the span of three years. It is being carried to the moon as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program, the agency's foray into partnering with the commercial space industry. 

Initially, it was scheduled to launch in late 2021 or early 2022, but setbacks in NASA's moon agenda delayed the launch to this spring.

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The mission represents America's first robotic moon rover (NASA's VIPER rover is scheduled to launch next year), as well as the first rover to be developed by university students. (NASA famously launched astronaut-driven "moon buggies" on the final three Apollo missions.) 

The 4.4-pound (2-kilogram) Iris has a chassis as big as a shoebox, and its carbon-fiber wheels are shaped like bottle caps. Its 60-hour-long mission will be a primarily visual one: Snapping images of the moon's surface for geographic study. It will also test new localization techniques as it transmits data about its position back to Earth.

In addition to Iris, the Carnegie Mellon team plans to send along an art installation called the MoonArk, a tiny time capsule filled with poems, music, pictures and small objects. The project is meant to convey a narrative "that is moving to people now, but also 1,000 years down the road," Dylan Vitone, an associate professor at Carnegie Mellon and the MoonArk director, said in a statement. A second, identical ark is currently on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

MoonArk and its pint-sized rover companion will hitch a ride to space aboard United Launch Alliance's Vulcan Centaur rocket, and be shuttled down to the lunar surface by Pittsburgh-based space company Astrobotic's Peregrine lander. The launch is scheduled for no earlier than May 4 — which, fittingly, the internet has christened international Star Wars Day — from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. 

"Hundreds of students have poured thousands of hours into Iris," Raewyn Duvall, a research associate at Carnegie Mellon University and commander of the mission said in a statement. "We've worked for years toward this mission, and to have a launch date on the calendar is an exciting step."

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