NASA Army of independent lunar robots


With NASA returning to the moon with Artemis The campaign, the space agency develops an army of independent lunar robots to achieve this.

Rovers cadres in NASA, short for an independent cooperative distributor, are explorers with four wheels that work with solar panels. About the size of a portable bag, these independent robots will largely plan the moon’s surface and use the radar to discover what is under the top layer of the moon dust, also called lunar recole.

NASA Cadre -5

Moon prescriptions are prepared in NASA for transportation.

NASA Mountain

Rovers will be able to communicate with each other via a radio system and send data again to their lunar land. The trio will be launched from Rover Cadre on a commercial spacecraft later this year.

Once the moon’s resources are determined, Ipex from NASA (abbreviation of the experimental excavation process for the use of resources on the site) can come to dig them. This miniature truck contains the miniature truck on the hollow drums on each side, which rotates in two opposite directions. The holes on the drums pick up and contain the reigolith moon. This recolith can be a source of valuable oxygen and hydrogen and the basic group of both: water.

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The Ipex moon excavator is tested in NASA

Kennedy Space Center in NASA

It may help to be able to extract these life -working resources from the lunar environment to live and work on the surface of the moon for longer periods of time. Perhaps one day, lunar resources will help convert the moon into a starting point to explore the worlds behind.

To see these lunar workers at work, check the video in this article.



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