Another small step: Tiny Hungarian water-tracker aims to rove the Moon
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[February 17, 2021]
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - A miniature
rover being developed to explore the Moon's surface is on track to join
the search for water there, its Hungarian inventors believe - using a
device that weighs less than a bag of sugar.
Named after a Hungarian breed of dog, the Puli rover is a low-cost
platform designed to carry different payloads, including the ice water
snooper, which won the 2020 "Honey, I Shrunk the NASA Payload"
challenge, a competition organised by the U.S. space agency.
Weighing less than 400 grammes (14 oz), its purpose is to probe for
water ice by identifying and mapping the subsurface hydrogen content of
the lunar soil.
"It looks for background radiation and then the background radiation
induces a secondary radiation coming out of the Moon," said Matyas
Hazadi, head of technical engineering at Budapest-based Puli Space
Technologies Ltd, which developed both it and the rover.
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Analog Astronauts of OeWF, Inigo Munoz and Carmen Kohler test the
Moon Robot named 'Puli Rover' at the Kaunertaler Glacier, Austria,
August 3, 2015. Claudia Stix/OeWF via REUTERS
"It is comparing the different energy of the background radiation
spectrum to find water."
NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) last
year confirmed the existence of water - and hence a potential source
of rocket fuel, rehydration and oxygen - on the Moon for the first
time.
The rover has four independently steerable wheels formed of
foot-like rubberised spokes and can scale 40-45 degrees slopes, and
its prototypes have been tested on lunar-like terrain in Hawaii and
Morocco.
Backed by NASA development funds, the firm expects it to be ready to
deploy on a lunar mission from next year.
(Reporting by Krisztina Fenyo; editing by John Stonestreet)
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