PTScientists continued work on a mission outside the GLXP. In 2019 they were part of a consortium including Arianespace which won a contract from ESA to study polar landing missions. In July 2019 funding shortfalls forced PTScientists into bankruptcy, but in September they were acquired by another company, changed their name to Planetary Transportation Systems (PTS GmbH) and continued their work on that contract. More details here:
Puli Space worked on a rover with interesting wheels (https://pulispace.com/). Each wheel consisted of five radial legs widening into a 'foot'. When this seemed out of reach they decided to fly a time capsule payload on Astrobotic's first mission (https://www.astrobotic.com/team-puli-space-is-the-third-google-lunar-xprize-team-to-reserve-a-ride-to-the-moon-with-astrobotic/)
These things didn't happen, but Puli survived the end of the GLXP and developed an instrument for detecting water in polar craters. One was mounted on the hopping vehicle...
#moon #GLXP
What about this landing site? What would team Indus actually do? They teamed up with Brown University's Apollo veteran Jim Head to develop a plan. The map (located in the previous map) shows their idea - analyze two different lava flows and a fresh crater's ejecta.
As the Google Lunar X Prize faded into oblivion a new opportunity arose: NASA's CLPS program. But foreign companies were unable to join it. Team Indus created Orbit Beyond in the USA to join it.
#moon #GLXP
Oops, I forgot I had said I would provide a map of all GLXP sites, so here it is. First, all specific sites mentioned by the teams, and a second map showing the sites being considered at the end of the competition. If anybody knows of any other sites please let me know.
Golden Spike will start tomorrow.
All Golden Spike landings were designed to be automated so the crew did not have to train to fly the lander. By October 2013 the plan had hardware procurement starting in 2015, test flights in 2018 and revenue flights in 2020.
After all that, let's get to the part that really interested me. As usual it was landing site selection. Tomorrow we will start to consider where these crews might go.
One reward for participating in the Indiegogo event was to choose a landing area from a list of eight: Aristarchus, Copernicus, Davy crater chain, Marius Hills, Schröter’s Valley, Tycho, Plato and Dionysius, and the winner was Aristarchus. I don't know how the list was compiled.
Stern said at LPSC in 2013 that a Russian response to the Golden Spike concept had been that they could land by one of their old landers, and NASA suggested the same later.
#moon #goldenspike