Explore >> Select a destination


You are here

www.intuitivemachines.com
| | lasp.colorado.edu
5.8 parsecs away

Travel
| | A first-of-its-kind camera developed in partnership between CU Boulder and Ball Aerospace will soon be landing on the moon. NASA announced today that it has selected a scientific instrument, called the Lunar Compact Infrared Imaging System (L-CIRiS), for its Commercial Lunar Payload Services program. The camera will ride along with one of three robotic landers that will touch down on the lunar surface in the next several years-a key step in NASA's goal of sending people back to the moon by 2024. LASP planetary scientist Paul Hayne, who is leading the development of the instrument, said that the goal is to collect better maps of the lunar surface to understand how it formed and its geologic history. L-CIRiS will use infrared technology to map the temperatures...
| | masten.aero
4.9 parsecs away

Travel
| | Masten's Xelene lunar lander will deliver several instruments to assess the composition of the Moon, detect volatiles and evaluate radiation.
| | www.colorado.edu
6.3 parsecs away

Travel
| | NASA announced that it will send a new infrared camera to the moon to collect unprecedented temperature data on the boulders and shadows at the surface.
| | www.intuitivemachines.com
21.2 parsecs away

Travel
| via Intuitive MachinesHouston - NASA has selected Intuitive Machines to deliver four science and technology demonstration payloads to Reiner Gamma on the Moon at the firm fixed price of $77,500,000. The near 100kg surface payload delivery mission is the Houston-based company's third Moon contract award under NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. The CLPS payloads will be incorporated into the already announced IM-3 commercial mission and fly on board a Nova-C lander. IM-3 i