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  Venturi Astrolab’s FLEX rover and lunar wheel

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Author Topic:   Venturi Astrolab’s FLEX rover and lunar wheel
Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 52174
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 03-23-2023 10:05 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Venturi Astrolab release
Astrolab's FLEX Rover to be Launched on Upcoming SpaceX Mission to the Moon

FLEX rover expected to be the largest and most capable rover ever to travel to the Moon

Today (March 23, 2023) Venturi Astrolab, Inc. (Astrolab), announced it has reached an agreement with Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) for the company to transport Astrolab's Flexible Logistics and Exploration (FLEX) rover on an upcoming mission to the Moon. SpaceX will use the Starship launch and landing system for this mission as soon as mid-2026.

Above: Testing of Astrolab's FLEX Rover and its robotic arm. The testing was conducted near Death Valley, Calif. (Astrolab)

Upon completion of this mission, Astrolab's FLEX will become the largest and most capable rover to ever travel to the Moon. With a maximum combined rover and cargo mass of more than two tons, the FLEX rover is nearly three times the mass of its largest predecessor. This increased capacity provides significantly more opportunities to conduct scientific experiments and commercial endeavors on the lunar surface. Astrolab has already signed several customer agreements to carry payloads on this mission. The company expects to release details of these agreements later this spring.

FLEX is more than a rover, it's a logistics system for missions to the Moon and Mars

Historically, planetary rovers have been custom designed for each specific mission. These missions typically have occurred around once every ten years. But with the rapid increase in launch cadence along with the significant increases in payload capacity of launch vehicles, this bespoke approach to rover design is no longer practical or efficient.

That's why Astrolab designed the FLEX rover to transport and deploy payloads in a modular system. Astrolab seeks to prove the benefits of having a highly capable and versatile rover to establish infrastructure, conduct high-priority science, and deploy technology demos and other specialized systems on the lunar surface. Astrolab plans for this rover to be the first in a fleet of FLEX rovers on the lunar surface that will accelerate the vision of creating a permanent human presence on the Moon, and eventually Mars.

"Our Astrolab team has created much more than a rover for use on the Moon or Mars," said Jaret Matthews, Founder and CEO of Astrolab. "We've created a logistics system that can accommodate a wide variety of cargo. We expect that this approach will help establish a permanent lunar outpost on the Moon at a lower cost and in less time than previously envisioned. We are delighted that this contract with SpaceX will allow Astrolab to demonstrate the advantages of the FLEX rover and its modular payload system."

"Starship is designed to transport large amounts of cargo, including rovers, to the Moon and Mars for research and exploration," said Tom Ochinero, Senior Vice President, Commercial Business, SpaceX. "Developing sustainable outposts will require lunar logistics and transportation on the surface of the Moon, like what Astrolab offers. We look forward to working with the Astrolab team to deliver their FLEX Rover to the surface of the Moon."

In addition to being able to operate FLEX on the lunar surface from Earth, Astrolab designed the vehicle to serve as an unpressurized rover for a crew of two astronauts on the lunar surface. This design is compatible with NASA's requirements for its Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV), the rover which will be a standard component to the agency's Artemis program long-term.

Testing is ongoing

FLEX is more than just a concept. Last year, the Astrolab team began testing a full-scale, fully-functional terrestrial prototype of the FLEX rover in the California desert. Tests included both crewed and telerobotic operations, deployment of a variety of large payloads, science operations with its robotic arm, and engineering testing of the rover's mobility performance in challenging terrain. Testing has continued in lunar analog sites around California throughout 2022 and into this year.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 52174
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 06-19-2023 09:21 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Venturi Astrolab release
World first: Venturi's hyper-deformable lunar wheel presented at the Paris Air Show

On Monday 19 June 2023, Venturi Group presented its latest invention at the international Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, France: a hyper-deformable lunar wheel. Venturi Lab designed and manufactured the wheel using materials it created. The Venturi wheel is a world first.

A turning point in the history of the space industry, Venturi has reinvented the wheel. Engineers, chemists and physicists at Venturi Lab in Fribourg, Switzerland have created a unique hyper-deformable lunar wheel.

The wheel will be used on Venturi Astrolab's FLEX rover, a vehicle that will be deposited on the Moon in 2026 by Space X's Starship rocket and initially used to transport and deploy payloads.

In the past, with the exception of the Apollo missions, space exploration vehicles have always been equipped with rigid wheels. The Venturi wheel, however, is highly deformable while remaining long-lasting and robust.

From 2026, when the FLEX rover is put into service at the lunar south pole, where extreme temperatures (-90 to -230°C) prevail, the four wheels supporting the two-tonne vehicle (payload included) will warp in order to absorb ground irregularities as the FLEX travels at 20 km/h. The wheels will need to perform over at least 1,000 kilometres and resist strong radiation from the south pole.

Features of the Venturi wheel include:

  • an exceptional diameter of 930 mm
  • a complex system of 192 cables that act as spokes
  • a tread made flexible by a newly invented material
  • an outer rim equipped with springs
This breakthrough technology, based on unique materials, is equal in importance to the arrival of the rubber, and later pneumatic rimmed tyre in the 19th century.

NASA has selected Venturi Astrolab to test and analyse the Venturi wheel at the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland and the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston.

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