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  • session 8

    Title

    Hitchhiking to the Moon

    Description

    Based on the significant number of robotic lunar missions of the last decade, a dramatically increased interest in exploration of the Moon for the purpose of developing a permanent human and robotic presence, both for science and space exploration objectives can be expected for the next decades. This renewed interest is broad and international, involving space agencies from the USA, Europe, China, India, Japan, Russia, Germany, UK, and others. Efforts like NASA Lunar Science Institute's (NLSI) rapidly growing global network of affiliates - academic and research institutions which each act as nodes within an existing network of their own partners - create demands for additional payload and flight opportunities, particularly from countries which just started their involvement in lunar exploration and science. In the future, it is expected that there will be more opportunities for ride-sharing or secondary or tertiary payload opportunities to be flown to the Moon, even as part of commercial enterprises like Google Lunar X-PRIZE missions. Examples from recent years are ESA's SMART-1 mission launched as a co-passenger opportunity from GTO, ISRO‘s Chandrayaan spacecraft offering its platform as an opportunity to fly international instruments to the Moon or NASA‘s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft providing an opportunity for a secondary payload to the Moon, in the form of the LCROSS lunar impactor mission. This session provides a forum for the exchange of ideas for such small payloads to be demonstrated at the Moon, by =Hitch-hiking a ride‘ to the Moon. Examples of such payloads or missions include but are not limited to: micro-spacecraft orbiters, CubeSats, small probes, penetrators, micro-landers, hard landers, micro-rovers, secondary payload surface science instruments, distributed network landers, and many more. The focus of this session is on new mission concepts, technology readiness and ride-sharing requirements.

    Date

    2012-10-05

    Time

    09:00

    Room

    TS09 (Sala Spica, Hall 3)

    IPC members
    • Chairman: Dr. Leon Alkalai, Mandala Space Ventures, United States;

    • Chairman: Prof. Rene Laufer, Luleå University of Technology, Sweden;

    • Rapporteur: Dr. Adam Baker, Rocket Engineering Ltd., United Kingdom;

    papers

    Order

    Time

    Paper title

    Mode

    Presentation status

    Speaker

    Affiliation

    Country

    1

    SYMPOSIUM KEYNOTE: LightSail: Spacecraft Ready for Launch

    30'

    withdrawn

    Dr. Louis Friedman

    The Planetary Society

    United States

    2

    Getting to the Moon with the Google Lunar X PRIZE

    15'

    confirmed

    Ms. Amanda Stiles

    SpaceX

    United States

    3

    State of the art of Team Italia AMALIA mission for the Google Lunar X Prize race

    15'

    confirmed

    Prof. Michèle Lavagna

    Politecnico di Milano

    Italy

    4

    Getting to the Moon via the JURBAN Google Lunar X PRIZE team

    15'

    no-show

    Mr. Blaze Sanders

    JURBAN

    United States

    5

    The Penn State Lunar Lion: A University Mission to Explore the Moon

    15'

    confirmed

    Prof. David B. Spencer

    Pennsylvania State University

    United States

    6

    SPACEIL - ISRAELI LUNAR EXPLORATION AS A TOOL TO ENGAGE THE YOUTH IN SPACE RESEARCH AND EDUCATION

    15'

    no-show

    Mr. Yonatan Winetraub

    SpaceIL

    Israel

    7

    Interdisciplinary design towards a rack motion lunar micro-rover

    15'

    confirmed

    Mr. Vidal Baudet Jarque

    UPM

    Spain

    8

    A modular, miniaturized, low-mass in-situ dust detector for piggyback payload opportunities on small spacecraft, landers and rovers.

    15'

    confirmed

    Mr. Alexander Wolf

    University of Stuttgart

    Germany

    9

    A STANDARD DEVICE FOR CHILDREN'S LANDED PAYLOADS

    15'

    withdrawn

    Dr. James Burke

    The Planetary Society

    United States

    10

    Electrolysis Propulsion Systems for Interplanetary CubeSat Missions

    15'

    withdrawn

    Mr. Rodrigo Zeledon

    Cornell University

    United States

    11

    An affordable paradigm of hitchiker lunar and planetary spacecraft for exploration and commerce

    15'

    confirmed

    Mr. David Dunlop

    National Space Society

    United States

    12

    The incorporation of transdisciplinary thinking into the development of hitchhiking payloads

    15'

    confirmed

    Ms. Joanna Griffin

    University of Plymouth, Transtechnology Research Group

    United Kingdom

    13

    Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) Mission: Facilitating Future Exploration of the Moon

    15'

    confirmed

    Mr. David Lehman

    Caltech/JPL

    United States