Designers of Hopping Spacecraft Hope to Win Private Moon Race

Artist's interpretation of the Draper/MIT team's hopping spacecraft on the moon, for the Google Lunar X Prize.
Artist's interpretation of the Draper/MIT team's hopping spacecraft on the moon, for the Google Lunar X Prize. (Image credit: Draper/MIT)

Though a new, hopping spacecraft wasdesigned with a Mars mission in mind, its creators plan to send it on a testvoyage to the moon first ? and possibly snag a big prize in the process.

The spacecraft, built by scientists atMIT and Draper Laboratory in Cambridge, Mass., will compete for the GoogleLunar X Prize, most of which goes to the first team that sends a privatelyfunded spacecraft to the moon. Up for grabs is a $20 million purse and majorbragging rights. [Photo of the private moon and mars hopper]

?Draper has a long history of helpingNASA land things on other planets," said Seamus Touhy, Draper?s directorof space systems. ?They all ended up being things that landed and stayed. Ifyou wanted to explore, you landed a rover.?

"All you hear is the pop-pop-pop ofgas," Touhy told SPACE.com.

?"We?re hoping by 2014 we?ll have amission," Touhy said.

"It could be used on asteroidswhere you couldn?t use a rover because it?s such a reduced gravity environment,"Touhy said. "We?re at a similar point where we were pre-Apollo. You alwayslearn a lot more by touching down."

This story was provided by BusinessNewsDaily, a sister siteof SPACE.com. ReachBusinessNewsDaily senior writer Ned Smith at nsmith@techmedianetwork.com. Follow him on twitter @nedbsmith.

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