Joshua Buck
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1100
jbuck@nasa.gov
Amber Philman
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468
amber.n.philman@nasa.gov
HILO, Hawaii -- NASA is conducting a
nine-day field test starting Tuesday outside Hilo, Hawaii, to evaluate new
exploration techniques for the surface of the moon. These mission simulations,
known as analog missions, are performed at extreme and often remote Earth
locations to prepare for robotic and human missions to extraterrestrial
destinations.
The In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU)
analog mission is a collaboration of NASA partners, primarily the Canadian
Space Agency (CSA), with help from the Pacific International Space Center for
Exploration Systems (PISCES).
The ISRU analog mission will demonstrate
techniques to prospect for lunar ice. The testing site near Hilo features
lava-covered mountain soil similar to the ancient volcanic plains on the moon.
The two main tests under way are the Regolith and Environment Science and
Oxygen and Lunar Volatile Extraction (RESOLVE) and Moon Mars Analog Mission
Activities (MMAMA).
The demonstration includes CSA's Artemis
Jr. rover and a drill. These devices support the NASA RESOLVE payload. RESOLVE
is designed to prospect for water, ice and other lunar resources. It also will
demonstrate how future explorers can take advantage of resources at potential
landing sites. The rover and its onboard instrumentation are about as tall as a
human and weigh about 660 pounds, three times heavier than the equipment that
would be used on an actual mission.
MMAMA is a group of small projects and
tests that will define the requirements for navigation, mobility,
communications, sample processing, curating and other critical elements that
could be used in future science and exploration missions. Using another CSA
rover, Juno, and payload interfaces, the MMAMA suite of tests includes analysis
of regolith using pryolysis (which is breaking down the samples by heating
them), robotic resource mapping, a miniaturized Mossbauer spectrometer, and a
combined miniaturized Mossbauer and X-Ray fluorescence spectrometer. A team of
engineers and researchers will monitor all of the tests from a mission control
set up in Hawaii.
Lessons learned from the ISRU project
will become increasingly important as NASA embarks on deep-space missions.
Instead of having to launch from Earth with all the supplies needed, a human
crew could go into space knowing that natural resources already are waiting for
them.
Reporters are invited to the test site
for a demonstration beginning at 9 a.m. HST Thursday, July 19. Journalists
should contact Amber Philman at 321-431-4970 or amber.n.philman@nasa.gov by 2
p.m. HST, Wednesday, July 18, to attend. Access to the test site requires an
escort and a letter of assignment on company letterhead for credentials.
For more information about NASA's
exploration plans, visit http://www.nasa.gov/exploration.
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