NASA is seemingly giving its ice-scouting moon rover mission one other attempt. The area company has announced that the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) venture — which was called off last year after a sequence of delays and mounting prices — may catch a journey to the moon with Blue Origin in 2027 below the Business Lunar Payload Providers (CLPS) program. Blue Origin should first plan and reveal how the supply on the lunar floor would work, and if it is all to NASA’s liking, VIPER might be ferried by the corporate’s Blue Moon Mark 1 lander.
Blue Origin hasn’t but tried a moon touchdown, however the first alternative for its Blue Moon Mark 1 lander is predicted to launch later this yr as a part of one other CLPS supply. That mission can even assist to tell NASA’s determination about VIPER’s rideshare, which might use a second Mark 1 lander that the company says is already in manufacturing. If VIPER does finally make it to the moon, it’s going to be deployed within the excessive setting of the lunar South Pole to seek for water ice and different sources that would assist future missions.
“This supply may present us the place ice is almost certainly to be discovered and best to entry, as a future useful resource for people,” mentioned Joel Kearns, Deputy Affiliate Administrator for Exploration with NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, in a press release. “And by learning these sources of lunar water, we additionally acquire invaluable perception into the distribution and origin of volatiles throughout the photo voltaic system, serving to us higher perceive the processes which have formed our area setting and the way our interior photo voltaic system has developed.”