NASA may have scuttled its plans to return humans to the moon's surface, but Lockheed Martin may have a better idea.
November 24, 2010The longtime government contractor has begun pitching the L2-Farside Mission, which would still send humans to the moon—just not the surface. Instead, it would be a teleoperation mission, where a crew orbits the planet in the confines of a spacecraft, and then teleoperates robots on the lunar surface, Space.com reports.
Lockheed Proposes Far Side of the Moon Mission
via Space.com
The first Orion missions to the moon's far side, viewed as feasible by 2016 to 2018, would accomplish science goals on the lunar surface using robotic rovers controlled by astronauts in space "as practice for doing the same thing at Mars," Hopkins told SPACE.com.
Each flight would prove out the Orion capsule's life support systems for one-month duration missions before attempting a six-month-long asteroid mission.
Astronauts would orbit the L2 point for about two weeks – long enough to operate a rover through the full length of a lunar day.
Mission Proposed to Send Astronauts to the Moon's Far SideOnce at this vantage point – 40,000 miles above the far side of the moon – the Orion crew would be able to see both the entire far side of the moon, and the Earth.
Pretty cool stuff. Also was mentioned in the article that the robots would construct a radio telescope on the far side of the moon.
related:
Japan taking humanoid robots to moon by 2015
Russia plans its own moon base (inhabited) around 2027