Entrepreneurs will roam in space some day, and a student-led group in central Florida is in the thick of the competition to send a remote- controlled rover to the moon as one of the first steps in the private sector鈥檚 ambitious leap from Earth.
Earthrise Space, an Orlando non-profit launched by aerospace engineering students and advisers, may not win the race to the moon but it has achieved several milestones, including snagging a NASA contract that could be worth $10 million.
NASA is trying to spur private industry participation in space exploration, and the agency has agreed to buy data from Earthrise and five other companies working on lunar robot projects. The contracts are worth at least $10,000 each and as much as $10 million. 鈥淭his is huge for us. It gives us more credibility,鈥 says Ruben Nu帽ez, a senior engineering major at the 麻豆原创 and a founder of Earthrise and its lunar rover project called Omega Envoy.
Debra Reinhart, assistant vice president for research in the Office of Research and Commercialization at 麻豆原创, says the lunar project has the support of the school鈥檚 Florida Space Institute.
Earthrise and the other NASA contract winners are among dozens of companies, university consortiums and groups participating in a race-to-space competition called the Google Lunar X Prize. The $20-million grand prize will go to the first competitor to land a robot on the moon, explore at least 500 meters and send video and images back to Earth.
鈥淭he moon is the end goal, but they don鈥檛 have to get to the moon to succeed. They鈥檙e getting turned on to space, and they鈥檙e building real space hardware right now,鈥 says Joseph Palaia, an Earthrise board member and vice president of operations for 4 Frontiers Inc., a space technology and consulting company in New Port Richey.
Palaia helped test one of its rovers on a remote island near Greenland in 2009, beaming signals to student controllers in Orlando. The students from 麻豆原创 and Embry Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach are crafting a more advanced rover and keeping their eyes on the sky.
鈥淲e鈥檙e aiming high,鈥 Nu帽ez says.
Source: Florida Trend, , by Jerry Jackson – 1/1/2011