session 2B

Title

Moon Exploration – Part 2

Description

This session will address current and future lunar missions. The session will address orbital missions, robotic surface missions, as well as life sciences on the Moon, resource utilisation and preparatory activities for future solar system exploration.

Date

2013-09-24

Time

14:45

Room

311A

IPC members
papers

Order

Time

Paper title

Selection result

Mode

Presentation status

Speaker

Affiliation

Country

1

Introduction of International Space Exploration Research Institute Activities in Korea

accepted

15'

confirmed

Dr. Tai Sik Lee

International Space Exploration Research Institute / Hanyang University

Korea, Republic of

2

The Technical Characteristic and Fruition of Chang'e-2 Mission

accepted

15'

confirmed

Prof. Huang Jiangchuan

Beijing Institute of Control Engineering, China Academy of Space Technology (CAST)

China

3

A Rover Vision-Based Relative Localisation System for the RESOLVE Moon Exploration Mission

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Vincent Simard-Bilodeau

NGC Aerospace Ltd.

Canada

4

Wireless Sensor Networks for Moon Exploration

accepted

15'

confirmed

Dr. Sergio Cunha

Tekever

Portugal

5

VisOne: Maturing the Lunar Vision-based Absolute Navigation Technology

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Cristian Corneliu Chitu

GMV-Romania

Romania

6

Lunar Environmental Analog Investigations with the IPG6-B Test Facility: Mini-Magnetospheres, Regolith-Plasma-Spacecraft Interactions

accepted

15'

withdrawn

Mr. Michael Dropmann

Institute of Space Systems, University of Stuttgart

Germany

7

The Mark IV: A Scalable Lunar Miner Prototype

accepted

15'

confirmed

Mr. Aaron Olson

University of Wisconsin

United States

8

On the Evolution of Energy Supply for Future Habitats on the Moon – An Example based on Lunar Oxygen Production

accepted

15'

withdrawn

Mr. Andy Braukhane

Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V. (DLR)

Germany

9

Research of drilling in the simulated moon vacuum environment

accepted

15'

confirmed

10

A positioning technology of lunar rover Teleoperation Based on vision

accepted

15'

confirmed