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Aerospace start-up reveals FLEX lunar rover, designed to be part of NASA’s Artemis program

Astrolab executives say the four-wheeled, car-sized FLEX rover is designed for use in NASA`s Artemis program, aimed at returning humans to the moon as early as 2025 and establishing a long-term lunar colony as a precursor to sending astronauts to Mars.

  • Venturi Astrolab 's Lunar rover weighs just over 1,100 pounds (500 kilograms)
  • It can survive the extreme cold of a lunar night, up to 300 hours in total darkness
  • Car-sized FLEX rover is designed for use in NASA`s Artemis program

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Aerospace start-up reveals FLEX lunar rover, designed to be part of NASA’s Artemis program Image for representation

A startup in the Los Angeles region created by a veteran spaceflight robotics engineer showed a full-scale, functional prototype for a next-generation lunar rover that is as fast as NASA's old "moon buggy" but is meant to accomplish much more.

During a five-day field test in December, the company, Venturi Astrolab Inc, revealed photographs and video of its Flexible Logistics and Exploration (FLEX) vehicle riding over the rocky California desert near Death Valley National Park.

Astrolab executives say the four-wheeled, car-sized FLEX rover is designed for use in NASA`s Artemis program, aimed at returning humans to the moon as early as 2025 and establishing a long-term lunar colony as a precursor to sending astronauts to Mars.

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Unlike the 1970s Apollo-era moon buggies or the current generation of robotic Mars rovers tailored for specialized tasks and experiments, FLEX is designed as an all-purpose vehicle that can be driven by astronauts or by remote control.

Built around a modular payload system inspired by conventional containerized shipping, FLEX is versatile enough to be used for exploration, cargo delivery, site construction and other logistical work on the moon, the company says.

If NASA adopts FLEX and its modular payload platform for Artemis, it would become the first passenger-capable rover to ply the lunar surface since Apollo 17, the last of six original U.S. manned missions to the moon, in December 1972.

Apollo 17`s lunar roving vehicle set a moon speed record of 11 miles per hour (17.7 km/h). FLEX can move just as swiftly.

Apollo astronauts found "they spent just as much time off the ground as on it at that speed, so it`s kind of a practical limit for the moon," where gravity is one-sixth that of Earth, said company's CEO Matthews, a former rover engineer for NASA`s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

While Apollo LRVs carried up to two astronauts seated at its controls like a car, FLEX passengers - one or two at a time - ride standing in the back, driving the vehicle with a joystick.

The rover itself, with a Jeep-like wheelbase, weighs just over 1,100 pounds (500 kilograms) but has a 3,300-pound cargo capacity, about the same as a light-duty pickup truck.

"With its solar-powered batteries fully charged, the vehicle can drive two astronauts for eight hours straight and has sufficient energy capacity to survive the extreme cold of a lunar night, up to 300 hours in total darkness, at the moon`s south pole", Matthews said.

During the field test at the Dumont Dunes Off-Highway Recreation Area, the rover was piloted by retired Canadian astronaut and Astrolab advisory board member Chris Hadfield and MIT aerospace graduate student Michelle Lin.

Video showed the pair dressed in mock spacesuits riding on the vehicle over a sand dune and using it to set up a large, vertical solar array. "It was huge fun to drive the FLEX," Hadfield said in the video.

With inputs from Reuters

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