HomeScience & EnvironmentNASA’s VIPER Gave Up...

NASA’s VIPER Gave Up a Ride to the Moon. This Startup’s Rover Took It.

NASA’s second thoughts about VIPER opened an opportunity for someone else to book that ride to the moon. Just because its cargo was canceled did not mean Astrobotic’s journey was off — it remains scheduled for later this year. And on Wednesday, a small startup named Venturi Astrolab Inc. announced it had claimed that opportunity to accelerate its own lunar rover plans.

“We’re excited to get actual wheels in the dirt this year and see how all our tech performs,” Jaret Matthews, the chief executive of Astrolab, said in an interview. (Despite the similar names, the two companies are unrelated.)

Many people inside and outside of NASA were perplexed by the cancellation of VIPER, because the rover, while over budget and behind schedule, had been completed. It needed just one more round of testing before it would be ready for launch. NASA officials said that instead, the finished rover would be disassembled.

In addition, they said NASA would still pay $323 million to Astrobotic. Thus, canceling the mission would save NASA a relatively paltry amount — $84 million — after it had spent about $800 million.

For its fee, Astrobotic would conduct the mission as planned, but the lander spacecraft, known as Griffin, would carry a nonfunctional dummy weight instead of VIPER.

NASA officials said that for Astrobotic to perform the landing successfully was in itself a valuable exercise, and that the company was free to sell the payload space on Griffin to another customer if it could, replacing the dummy weight.

“We had more than 60 organizations from around the world knock on our door,” said John Thornton, chief executive of Astrobotic.

Astrolab, he said, was the best match. “They could move fast,” Mr. Thornton said. “They had a payload that matched the interfaces already for the lander.”

The rover that Astrolab will fly on this mission is also roughly the same size as VIPER. Mr. Matthews declined to say how much Astrolab was paying Astrobotic.

Astrolab is developing a rover the size of a Jeep Wrangler that could autonomously drive cargo or people across the moon’s surface. The company calls it FLEX, short for Flexible Logistics and Exploration Rover.

FLEX is much too big and heavy to fit on Astrobotic’s lander. Astrolab has already booked space for FLEX on a future flight of Starship, the gargantuan spacecraft currently under development by SpaceX, the rocket company founded by Elon Musk.

But before sending FLEX to the moon, Astrolab wants to send a smaller, 1,000-pound rover named FLIP — short for FLEX Lunar Innovation Platform — to test technologies like batteries, motors, power systems and communications. A particular goal is studying how to minimize problems caused by particles of lunar dust, which are angular and sharp.

The smaller FLIP is the one that Astrobotic’s Griffin will take to the moon.

Mr. Matthews said FLIP would also carry a couple of commercial payloads that would be announced later.

Despite Astrobotic’s failure last year, Mr. Matthews said he had confidence in Astrobotic. “From our perspective, it’s actually a way to reduce risk for our subsequent missions,” he said. “If we didn’t have full confidence in Astrobotic, we wouldn’t be doing this.”

Mr. Thornton said the past year had been one of introspection for the company. “It’s like the old saying, ‘Whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,’” he said. “I think in this case, it really did.”

Despite NASA’s efforts to kill VIPER, the rover is not dead nor dismantled yet. NASA asked for and received proposals to continue the mission without additional investments from NASA.

The agency expects to make a decision this summer. But with the new Trump administration indicating more interest in Mars than the moon, everything could change soon.

Mr. Thornton said Astrobotic was not worrying about that possibility yet. “There’s certainly a lot of conversation in D.C.,” he said. “But right now we’re focused on what NASA has contracted us to do, and that is to deliver Griffin to the surface of the moon.”

Mr. Matthews said that if NASA indeed made a sharp turn toward Mars, Astrolab could pivot too.

“We’ve always considered ourselves to be a multi-planet business,” he said, “and we would be excited to go to Mars as well.”

Source link

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Most Popular

More from Author

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Read Now

Chinese surgeons attach woman’s torn ear to foot after accident

In an unorthodox medical procedure, Chinese surgeons temporarily attached a woman’s torn ear to her foot in the eastern...

Fossil footprints found in Bolivia reveal dinosaurs’ awkward attempts to swim

Legend once had it that the huge, three-toed footprints scattered across the central highlands of Bolivia came from supernaturally strong monsters - capable of sinking their claws even into solid stone.Then scientists came here in the 1960s and dispelled children's fears, determining that...

Key suspect in Liam Payne death case released from prison amid health fears

Braian Paiz, one of the two men charged in the Liam Payne death case, was released from prison and...

No 10 says it backs pubs as landlords bar Labour MPs in tax protest

Downing Street has insisted the government backs pubs, as a growing number sign up to a campaign to bar Labour MPs from their premises in protest at tax rates.The Labour MP ban was kicked off a week ago and more than 250 pubs, restaurants and hotels have...

World’s Most Expensive Substance: Just One Gram Of THIS, Equivalent To Four Hiroshima-Class Nuclear Weapons, Could Send Rockets To Mars | Science & Environment...

Neither gold nor diamonds, the world's costliest material is a substance known as antimatter that costs an estimated USD 62.5 trillion (Rs 62.5 lakh crore) a gram. A gram of it packs a punch of explosive energy equivalent to four Hiroshima-class nuclear weapons and is costlier than India's...

Rivian’s AI, autonomy impresses but not enough to offset EV concerns

Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe at the company's first "Autonomy and AI Day" on Dec. 11, 2025, in Palo Alto, California.Lora Kolodny | CNBCRivian Automotive impressed Wall Street on Thursday with its plans for artificial intelligence, automation and an internally developed silicon chip, but significant challenges involving demand...

‘Dhurandhar’ is out, and the familiar India-Pakistan arguments are back online

Propaganda, misrepresentation and the question of who owns the story dominate social media ...

Sombr talks about writing music from childhood bedroom and rise to fame

Sombr talks about writing music from childhood bedroom and rise to fame - CBS News ...

Initiative planned to empower Pakistani journalists with freelancing skills

To enable them build global clients, generate sustainable income in a rapidly changing media economy ...