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Earlier this month, members of the aerospace community gathered again for the 69th International Astronautical Congress in Bremen, Germany, and unless you zipped around the conference at the speed of light, you might have missed a few things. But not to worry, we have the highlights. This year, the industry seemed over the moon for — the moon.
With over 4,000 attendees, the event united professionals and the public in a celebration of reaching new heights as a collaborative, international community: Given there were over 2,000 oral presentations, 179 technical sessions and 480 interaction presentations.
An international competition to build technology for sustainable lunar exploration in categories across manufacturing, energy, resources, and biology, The Moon Race made its debut on October 1. Backed by industry giants like Airbus and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, startups and small to medium enterprises aim to build sustainable technologies to help humankind establish a permanent lunar presence.
“Knowledge for Tomorrow”
Alexander Gerst, the first German commander of the International Space Station (ISS), took command during on October 3 during IAC. Currently on the mission Horizons — Knowledge for Tomorrow to explore the history of mankind, Gerst called in from aboard the ISS to answer questions.
Lunar Intentions
The OHB Group and MT Aerospace signed a Letter of Intent with Bezos’ Blue Origin on October 1 for a future mission to the moon. The mission will take advantage of Blue Origin’s reusable technologies Blue Moon, a lunar lander capable of carrying several metric tons of cargo and New Glenn, an orbital-class rocket, and may play a role in plans to build an international platform dubbed the Gateway, a midpoint for astronauts to travel to deep space.
Moon Express
The US-based company Moon Express, founded with the goal of low-cost lunar travel, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) to support the Canadian space industry and academia taking cargo to the moon using Moon Express’s lunar orbiter and lander. Moon Express intends to begin regular flights to the Moon in 2020.
The UAE Makes More Steps to Space
NASA signed an Implementing Arrangement (IA) with the UAE Space Agency (UAESA) on October 1. Building off a framework established in June 2016, UAE already collaborates with US universities to build an orbiter scheduled to launch for Mars in 2020, but the new agreement gives UAESA more opportunities to use ISS and NASA opportunities to study interplanetary human life at UAE’s Mars Scientific City.
Interplanetary Travel
NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) announced a partnership on October 5 to push the limits of interplanetary space exploration, aiming for the moon and beyond. No human spacecraft has traveled this far since Apollo 17 in 1972. NASA’s Orion, designed for deep space, will take a solo trip, Exploration Mission-1 in 2020 for three weeks before potentially taking astronauts in the early 2020s.
Moon Camp
Partnered with the Airbus and Autodesk, the ESA launched “Moon Camp” on October 4, an educational competition challenging students ages 8 to 19 years old to design a moon camp that can sustain 2 astronauts and allow them to perform research. The online competition closes on March 16, 2019, leaving plenty of time to rise to the challenge of using local resources and protecting the camp from meteorites for the final drafts in Tinkercad or Autodesk.
The Lunar Lander Competition Begins
The lunar lander competition has begun. Not only did Blue Origin announce Blue Moon, a reusable large lander currently in the design phase, but Lockheed Martin revealed as well. Blue Moon is slated to carry multiple tons of cargo and maybe land by 2023, while Lockheed Martin’s lander is designed for four passengers and 2,000 pounds of cargo, although launch date depends on SLS.
Cameras to Find New Planets
The OHB Group signed a 288-million Euro contract with the ESA on October 4 as the main contractor of Planetary Transits and Oscillations of Stars (PLATO). Scheduled for launch in 2026, PLATO is tasked with using 26 cameras to finding planetary systems outside our solar system.
Visiting an Asteroid
The morning of October 3, the Japan Space Exploration Agency’s (JAXA) probe Hayabusa2, in collaboration with MASCOT, a German-French lander, successfully touched down on asteroid Ryugu. MASCOT spent over 17 hours exploring, taking photos and collecting data regarding the composition of Ryugu to learn about the formation of the solar system.
IAC’s sessions span a wide range of topics, from educating the next generation of astronauts to integrating AI. See you next year IAC, in Washington D.C. — and at this rate, one day on the moon.
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