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The European Space Agency (ESA) has launched an ambitious new project to build a sat-nav and communication satellite network in orbit around the moon.
This new infrastructure could one day turn our natural satellite into the ‘eighth continent’ as humanity spreads its wings and builds cities on the lunar surface.
ESA says the project, known as Moonlight, will support the Lunar Gateway space station, multiple agencies working on moon missions and human exploration.
In what will be the world’s first commercial service of its kind, a number of British firms have won contracts to investigate how it might work, worth over £2 million.
‘We are entering a new phase – the systematic exploration of our “eighth continent”, the Moon,’ ESA’s David Parker told BBC News.
‘The Moon is a repository of 4.5 billion years of Solar System history, but we’ve hardly begun to unlock its secrets. And so Moonlight is something that we see as really exciting, as a necessary infrastructure to support sustained exploration.’
No details on the final cost of the mission or when it might be ready and fully operational have been released by the space agency.
The European Space Agency (ESA) has launched an ambitious new project to build a sat-nav and communication satellite network in orbit around the moon
This new infrastructure could one day turn our natural satellite into the ‘eighth continent’ as humanity spreads its wings and builds cities on the lunar surface
ESA says the project, known as Moonlight, will support the Lunar Gateway space station, multiple agencies working on moon missions and human exploration
A number of firms from the UK, EU and Canada will work with the space agency to develop the Moonlight project, including how to provide telecom and navigation services to future missions – both large and small, crewed and robotic.
‘Such a lasting lunar link will enable sustainable space exploration,’ the agency says, which is one of the objectives of the NASA Artemis mission to return humans to the moon by 2024 and provide a permanent present on or around the natural satellite.
Dozens of international, institutional and commercial teams are sending missions to the Moon that envisage a permanent lunar presence.
The agency predicts that in future, thanks to the Lunar Gateway and an eventual moon base on the surface, there will be regular trips back and forth.
This will be vastly different to the Apollo era of lunar exploration, that involved a series of one-off missions to land on the surface of our moon.
Many of these initiatives come from the main space institutions in China, India, Japan and Russia, alongside other spacefaring nations, and private firms.
A reliable and dedicated lunar communications and navigation service would allow missions to land wherever they wanted.
Radio astronomers could set up observatories on the far side of the Moon, with the knowledge those signals will be easily and quickly relayed back to the Earth.
Rovers could trundle over the lunar surface more speedily. It could even enable the teleoperation of rovers and other equipment from Earth, ESA suggested.
Using a shared telecommunications and navigation service would reduce the design complexity of future individual missions and make them lighter, freeing space for more scientific instruments or other cargo, bringing the price down.
Lowering the ticket price to lunar exploration could empower a wider group of ESA member states to launch their own national lunar missions.
Commercial bodies could use innovative technologies developed for the Moon to create new services and products on Earth, which would create new jobs.
Dozens of international, institutional and commercial teams are sending missions to the Moon that envisage a permanent lunar presence
In what will be the world’s first commercial service of its kind, a number of British firms have won contracts to investigate how it might work, worth over £2 million
Using a shared telecommunications and navigation service would reduce the design complexity of future individual missions and make them lighter, freeing space for more scientific instruments or other cargo, bringing the price down
A reliable and dedicated lunar communications and navigation service would allow missions to land wherever they wanted
‘We are entering a new phase – the systematic exploration of our ‘eighth continent’, the Moon,’ ESA’s David Parker told BBC News
They could also identify new Moon-enabled services and products such as virtual reality games in which players manipulate lunar robots.
British firm Surrey Satellite Technology, through its subsidiary SSTL, will be heavily involved in Moonlight, working as a service provider and satellite manufacturer.
SSTL’s Managing Director Phil Brownnett said the efforts to create the network will reduce the design complexity of individual missions in the future.
‘Leading the consortium builds on our successful collaboration with ESA for our Lunar Pathfinder communications spacecraft which will provide the world’s first commercial Lunar data relay service after launch in 2022.’
British firm Surrey Satellite Technology, through its subsidiary SSTL, will be heavily involved in Moonlight, working as a service provider and satellite manufacturer
Commercial bodies could use innovative technologies developed for the Moon to create new services and products on Earth, which would create new jobs
UK Science Minister Amanda Solloway said the upcoming missions to the moon are exciting people all around the world, adding she was proud to see UK space companies leading the way in making them a reality
Inmarsat, based in London, and MDA Space and Robotics Ltd (MDA UK), based in the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus in Oxfordshire, are part of a consortium led by Telespazio in Italy exploring the idea in more detail.
They will be investigating the development of a Lunar Communications and Navigation Service (LCNS) to support future science, exploration and commercial activities in orbit above, and on, the lunar surface.
Yasrine Ibnyahya, Senior Director, Advanced Concepts and Technologies at Inmarsat, said providing communication and navigation capabilities around the Moon is a major challenge, both technically and commercially.
‘I strongly believe that the expertise and assets from Inmarsat and our partners can solve this challenge in the most efficient and cost-effective way.’
‘This lunar project is only the first step to unlock future opportunities. It can become the hub to facilitate human space exploration, further technology developments and perhaps access to new resources.’
UK Science Minister Amanda Solloway said the upcoming missions to the moon are exciting people all around the world, adding she was proud to see UK space companies leading the way in making them a reality.
‘Britain’s expertise in navigation and telecommunications is second to none and this first of its kind commercial service demonstrates our ambition for the UK to become a world-leading space nation.’
Radio astronomers could set up observatories on the far side of the Moon, with the knowledge those signals will be easily and quickly relayed back to the Earth
Using a shared telecommunications and navigation service would reduce the design complexity of future individual missions and make them lighter, freeing space for more scientific instruments or other cargo, bringing the price down
Rovers could trundle over the lunar surface more speedily. It could even enable the teleoperation of rovers and other equipment from Earth, ESA suggested
Elodie Viau, Director of Telecommunications and Integrated Applications at ESA said a last link with the moon would enable sustainable space exploration.
‘By using an ESA-backed telecommunications and navigation service for the Moon, explorers will be able to navigate smoothly and to relay to Earth all the knowledge gained from these lunar missions,’ Viau added.
‘A robust, reliable and efficient telecommunications and navigation system will make the dozens of individual missions planned for the Moon more cost-efficient and enable smaller countries to become space-faring nations, inspiring the next generation of scientists and engineers.’
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