• Home
  • Current congress
  • Public Website
  • My papers
  • root
  • browse
  • IAC-06
  • A3
  • 6
  • paper
  • NASA's RLEP - 2 mission, enabling human return to the moon

    Paper number

    IAC-06-A3.6.03

    Author

    Dr. John Horack, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)/Marshall Space Flight Center, United States

    Year

    2006

    Abstract
    Before returning humans to the Moon for mankind's seventh lunar landing, NASA will embark upon a series of robotic missions to prepare the way for further exploration.  These missions, part of the Robotic Lunar Exploration Program (RLEP), are designed to acquire decisive knowledge about the moon as well as to develop infrastructure needed to sustain human exploration in the lunar environment.  Here we focus on the second mission in the RLEP program, RLEP-2, the first dedicated to landing in the south polar region of the moon.  Managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, along with the Applied Physics Laboratory and NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, RLEP-2 will build upon knowledge gained from the Chandraayan-1 and Lunar Robotic Orbiter orbital missions, to help further the prospects for sustainable human exploration on the moon.  This mission will characterize the lighting environment in the polar region, critically important to understanding the amount of power available and to the thermal design of hardware, as well as explore the nature and distribution of volatiles that may be present in permanently shadowed regions of polar craters.  We shall review the current status of the mission, articulate the results of onoging trade studies in power, surface mobility, launch vehicles, measurements and instrumentation, and navigation/communication, as well as discuss the primary mission objectives in detail.
    Abstract document

    IAC-06-A3.6.03.pdf