NASA’s New Moon Rover Tested in Lunar Operations Lab

CLEVELAND (NASA PR) — An engineering model of the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover, or VIPER, is tested in the Simulated Lunar Operations Laboratory at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio.
About the size of a golf cart, VIPER is a mobile robot that will roam around the Moon’s South Pole looking for water ice in the region and for the first time ever, actually sample the water ice at the same pole where the first woman and next man will land in 2024 under the Artemis program.
The large, adjustable soil bin contains lunar simulant and allows engineers to mimic the Moon’s terrain. Engineers from NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, where the rover was designed and built, joined the Glenn team to complete the tests.
Test data will be used to evaluate the traction of the vehicle and wheels, determine the power requirements for a variety of maneuvers and compare methods of traversing steep slopes. Respirators are worn by researchers to protect against the airborne silica that is present during testing.
VIPER is a collaboration within and beyond the agency. NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley is managing the project, leading the mission’s science, systems engineering, real-time rover surface operations and software.
The rover’s instruments are provided by Ames, NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida and commercial partner, Honeybee Robotics in California. The spacecraft, lander and launch vehicle that will deliver VIPER to the surface of the Moon will be provided through NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, delivering science and technology payloads to and near the Moon.
5 responses to “NASA’s New Moon Rover Tested in Lunar Operations Lab”
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I know the answer…but why is there only one of these?
I probably have the same answers as you. One is that they are going to get it perfect the first time, so a back up isn’t necessary. Two is that they spent so much money on this one that another is beyond their budget. Three is that they just don’t consider the mission to be important enough to warrant more units.
without a doubt…you nailed them all. the Moon return is simply a canard. if going back to the Moon were at all important we would have a massive effort to understand the resources there
Didn’t we do this once already with the Resource Prospector ?
Though perspective may be playing into it a bit in this shot here, the VIPER rover looks bigger than I expected