Author Topic: Next Moon flight  (Read 42638 times)

Offline Paul451

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #60 on: 04/12/2024 01:30 am »
The payload for the 2026 Australian Artemis mission is apparently called "Roo-ver". And yes I hate every single person even vaguely involved in its naming.

Offline QuantumG

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #61 on: 04/12/2024 02:33 am »
The payload for the 2026 Australian Artemis mission is apparently called "Roo-ver". And yes I hate every single person even vaguely involved in its naming.

> The Australian public chose the name, after a competition that saw more than 8,000 entries.

Me too  ;D

Nah, I'm not this grumpy anymore. In fact, I recently bought myself a robotic research platform - the kind of kit a Masters student would pay good money to have extracted from their brain using Spotless Mind tech. There's so many terrible design decisions in this thing, the documentation is horrible- it's the v1 an embarrassed professional would delete. The kind of person who walks away from that and appreciates the opportunity to construct something better - both in terms of design and in building the teams and processes to get it done right - they'll be working on this rover. Which itself is a silly name for a robotics platform.

Looking forward to more landers!
Human spaceflight is basically just LARPing now.

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #62 on: 05/07/2024 11:16 pm »
Taken from the list a few posts before this one:

[NET 2024-9]   Blue Ghost M1 (RAC, LMS)   United States (Firefly Aerospace)
[NET 2024-10]   IM-2 (Prime-1)         United States (Intuitive Machines)
[NET 2024-11]   Griffin-1 (VIPER)         United States (Astrobotic)
[NET 2024]   Hakuto-R 2         Japan (ispace)

I think it's very probable that the VIPER launch will be postponed.  Astrobotic is talking about flying its cuberover soon and it might fly with VIPER at some later date.  I think this cuberover is what Astrobotic previously called Moonranger and was supposed to fly on Masten's lander.  I'm wondering if some other payloads will be combined with the cuberover to make a test flight of Griffin, assuming some funding can be found.  A big assumption!

Otherwise we are left with three other landers.  Will they fly this year?  In what order? All very uncertain so far.  Does anyone have any other news to report on this?

Offline AndrewM

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #63 on: 05/17/2024 03:20 pm »
Otherwise we are left with three other landers.  Will they fly this year?  In what order? All very uncertain so far.  Does anyone have any other news to report on this?

It looks like IM-2 is still targeting Q4.

Quote
“The technical improvements for IM-2 are vertically integrated capabilities within the company that we can perform with little or no impact on our intended quarter 4 2024 launch date or require any additional capital investment while we continue assembly of the flight vehicle.”
https://spacenews.com/intuitive-machines-making-upgrades-to-second-lunar-lander/

Offline Vultur

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #64 on: 08/24/2024 04:34 am »
Is Roo-ver on Artemis 3, or just part of the Artemis program but on a separate launch?

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #65 on: 09/03/2024 06:10 am »
Roo-ver on Artemis 3? Was it not supposed to fly on the CLPS lander which carries the ESA PROSPECT payload? That was just awarded to Intuitive Machines.

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: Next Moon flight
« Reply #66 on: 10/02/2024 06:27 pm »
Still very much uncertain are the dates and order of launch of the three upcoming Moon missions: IM-2, Blue Ghost and HAKUTO-R M2. It looks to me like they would all launch within a period of a few weeks, from late December to late January. But less uncertain (barring major delays) would be the order of landing. Flight times are approximately as follows:

IM-2: 5 days to landing
Blue Ghost: c. 45 days to landing
HAKUTO-R M2: c. 90 days to landing.

So if they all launch over a few weeks, they will land in that order regardless of launch order. We can expect landings in January, February and March or April.  Then maybe that Blue Moon test flight, and IM-3 (Lunar Vertex) late in the year. Does that sound about right?

 

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