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Announcement of Opportunity for the ESA Lunar Robotics Challenge
 
28 March 2008
As interest in exploration of the Moon soars among the world’s space agencies, the European Space Agency (ESA), through it's General Studies Programme, is challenging university students to develop a robotic vehicle that is capable of overcoming difficult terrain comparable to that at the lunar poles.
 
ESA’s first Lunar Robotics Challenge gets under way today with an Announcement of Opportunity that invites teams of university students to create an innovative, mobile robot that can retrieve samples from a lunar-like crater.

Up to eight of the best proposals will be selected for funding after evaluation by a team of ESA experts. The selected student teams will then be given the go-ahead to design their robotic systems, and eventually build them to compete in the Challenge event.  
 
Objectives
 
The proposals must include a mobile vehicle capable of retrieving samples and an associated tele-operation work station. The vehicle must weigh no more than 100 kg, consume no more than 2 kW of power, and measure no more than 0.5 cu. m. when stowed.

The robot’s mission will include a number of objectives:
  • Climb from a “landing site” to the rim of a lunar-like crater.
  • Descend into the crater, negotiating an incline of about 40 degrees.
  • Operate in sunlight on the crater’s rim, and in the dark interior of the crater.
  • Reach the bottom of the 15 m deep crater.
  • Locate and retrieve at least 100g of selected, visually distinctive, soil samples from the bottom of the crater.
  • Return to the rim and the “landing site”.
The vehicle will be tele-operated by a work station placed outside the crater with no direct visibility of the crater or rim.
 
 
Crater Plaskett seen by SMART-1’s camera
Crater Plaskett seen by SMART-1’s camera
How to Enter
 
Supported by funding from the ESA General Studies Programme (GSP), the Challenge is open to universities located in ESA Member States and Cooperating States.

Initial proposals and details of the student teams that will be participating must be submitted by a member of the university’s academic staff. In the case of joint proposals involving two or more universities, one of them will be designated as prime contractor, while the others will be classed as sub-contractors.

Since the Lunar Robotics Challenge involves an open competition for funding of university participation, a professor or other academic proposer must register the university in the ESA system and obtain a Bidder Code at an early stage.

Entries must be submitted no later than 13:00 (GMT+01:00) on the deadline date of 29 April 2008 and must be submitted either as 4 paper copies or (preferably) electronically.

Further details are available in the Proposal Submission.
 
 
Timetable
 
After the selection, a Kick Off Meeting for all entrants will be held by videoconference. The student teams will then have a few months to develop their design before a Critical Design Review (CDR) is held at ESTEC in the Netherlands. If successful at this review, the teams will be given approval and further funding to build their entry.

A Test Readiness Review will be held on the premises of each university team after the CDR. The Challenge will culminate in a 10-day competition, to be held in October 2008. The precise date and venue will be announced at the CDR.
 
 
 


More information
Why a Lunar Robotics Challenge?Proposal SubmissionLunar Robotics FAQ'sLunar Robotics FAQ's continued
Selected teams
Universität BremenJacobs UniversityUniversidad Politecnica de MadridOulun Yliopisto (University of Oulu)Università di PisaScuola Superiore Sant'AnnaSurrey Space Centre, University of SurreySwiss Federal Institute of Technology (Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule - ETH)
Documents
LRC Special conditions of tender and Proposal Template
Related news
Germany's CESAR crowned king of rovers in ESA’s Robotics ChallengeESA’s Lunar Robotics Challenge: A tough task for the student teamsEight teams taking up ESA’s Lunar Robotics Challenge
Related links
General Studies ProgrammeEMITS NewsAutomation and RoboticsAurora Exploration Programme
 
 
 
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