Picture of the Week: A Mysterious Development… November 25, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Lunar Development Corporation, lunar land use planning, NASA, Picture of the Week, private sector, public-private partnership, Sherlock Holmes , 3comments
This relatively unassuming rendering caught my eye when searching for something completely different (the International Lunar Network–features coming soon on that), and it was a small detail in the image that struck me, and sent me on a magical mystery tour of the web for more info:
Up on the carrier there, the label (in this NASA rendering) says:
Lunar Development Corporation.
As a 24-year-old with an Urban Planning degree, seeing such a particular phrase on a NASA rendering really got my attention. And what I’ve found has surprised me: this ‘Lunar Development Corporation’ could not only be a massive player in our colonization of the moon, but this reference on an official NASA image has proven to be highly mysterious.
A quick search on “lunar development corporation” dug up some gold (or helium-3, if you will):
- A detailed paper on public-private partnerships (PPP), including the concept of a singular Lunar Development Corporation (I’ll provide a full analysis of this paper as a marquee feature within the next two weeks);
- A mildly dated (February 2007) article from Space.com on methods of solidifying public; investor; and other support for lunar plans, which it notes could (in part) be accomplished by instituting “a public-private lunar development corporation” (again, singular).
Among other things, mostly odds and ends.
This became extremely strange upon finding the original source of the image; I first encountered it via a mostly unrelated ThomasNet article. Then, after some digging based on the ThomasNet description, I found the image in the Wikipedia article on Moon Colonization.
Taking the hunt to NASA itself, a search for “lunar development corporation” on their main site turned up….nothing. Hmm. I then applied my method for finding that Wikipedia repeat of the image to NASA’s new official images site, NASAImages.org, and found the image with a full (and revealing?) description.
The archived image’s original source is this page, which has the same description alongside it.
That description is potentially very revealing, by just how unrevealing it is. Nowhere is the appearance of “Lunar Development Corporation” mentioned, as the brief text talks only about the rover and cargo lander.
A search on NASA’s site for “lunar development corporation” turns up only a brief mention of “the new Houston-based Lunar Development Corporation” being listed as founded apparently by the Artemis Society‘s Gregory Bennett (a bio which does not mention this LDC in any form), and a Google or other search turns up no official site or mention of the entity in any form..
…yet it appears on the cargo lander on this official NASA image.
This may be explained by a small detail, from the end of the image’s description:
“This image was produced for NASA by John Frassanito and Associates. Technical concepts from NASA’s Planetary Projects Office (PPO), Johnson Space Center (JSC). “
Here’s the website for John Frassanito and Associates, but a search for “Planetary Projects Office” and/or alongside “Johnson Space Center” turns up…nothing (except more concept images). NASA has a plethora of official sites for its various departments, but yet this Houston space center’s “PPO” does, apparently, not.
A little more hunting at the Johnson Space Center site turns up a reference that the PPO became the “Planetary Missions and Materials Branch”, a search for which, again, fails to turn up an official site. Searching the JSC’s site brought up more odds and ends, including a newsletter (Lunar News issue number 62) from 1998, so it looks like “Planetary Mission and Materials Branch” may have been a name that was changed again, though to what, I’m not sure.
In fact, closer inspection of the original image’s page confirms it is from 1994.
So after all that adventure, it may just be an old and outdated concept. Still, the prominence of the “Lunar Development Corporation” on the rendering (and others, it turns out), combined with the dual facts that the rendering is from “technical concepts, and the lack of mention of the Corporation in the image descriptions despite it being so readily apparent in them, suggest that “Lunar Development Corporation” was an element of the technical concepts not entirely intended to be released; e.g., an innocuous leak.
I’m going to do some further investigating, sending off some emails, and I’ll post an update in the very near future about whether the Lunar Development Corporation could be something currently being worked on (as it is featured in concept images that are alongside much more current ones in the galleries). Stay tuned… :)
SpaceX Sucessfully Tests Falcon-9 Engines (News) November 24, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Current News, private sector, SpaceX , add a commentIn a significant step for the private space boom, leading company SpaceX successfully test-fired their Falcon 9 craft‘s engines today:
While their current programs have their eye on low-earth orbit, long-term SpaceX is looking at trans-Lunar capabilities for their Falcon vehicle family, as is demonstrated in their Falcon Lunar Capability Guide (expect a detailed analysis of that report here at Luna C/I within the next week :) ).
SpaceX’s crafts are designed to be much more cost effective and reliable than past, government rockets, “up to a factor of ten“.
Check out SpaceX’s website–it is quite spiffy, being both very sharp graphically and stuffed full of great, accessible information; they really set a bar for space boom/base race web development. Also, check out the breathtaking Earth-to-orbit video of their historic Falcon 1 launch earlier this year, and their really, really crisp photos from that event.
Check back here later this week for that in-depth analysis of the SpaceX Falcon Lunar Capability Guide :)
Chandrayaan-1 Payload Feature #3: Moon Impact Probe (MIP) November 22, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Chandrayaan-1, Chandrayaan-1 Payload Features, Indian Space Research Organization , add a commentToday is the third in a series of features on each of India‘s recently-launched Chandrayaan-1‘s scientific payloads. The Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter has 11 scientific instruments onboard to complete an array of measurements: five Indian instruments, and six from other nations and organizations (including the ESA and NASA).
The Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter has 11 scientific instruments onboard to complete an array of measurements: five Indian instruments, and six from other nations and organizations (including the ESA and NASA). For this edition, we look at an Indian payload that made headlines with its recent success: the Moon Impact Probe (MIP).
Moon Impact Probe (MIP)
The 35kg MIP was designed to demonstrate, through its 25-minute flight to the lunar surface from the Chandrayaan orbiter, technologies for making both soft and hard landings (the MIP’s descent was a hard landing, hitting the surface of the Moon at a solid 3,100 miles an hour). Arriving on the lunar surface at 20:06 on November 14th, 2008, the MIP delivered an Indian tricolor flag (on its hull) to Luna.
The MIP itself had three payloads of its own:
- Radar Altimeter – As the ISRO themselves put it: “for measurement of altitude of the Moon Impact Probe and for qualifying technologies for future landing missions. The operating frequency band is 4.3 GHz ± 100 MHz.”
- Video Imaging System – Fairly self-explanatory, this took images as the probe approached the surface, including the two below:
- Mass Spectrometer – Measured the lunar atmosphere’s composition, with a mass resolution of 0.5 amu and sensitivities to partial pressure of the order of 10-14 torr.
All in all, the MIP was a great success, making India one of the select few nations to have landed (hard or soft) a craft on the moon.
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Keep checking back here for more payload features, Chandrayaan-1 news, and a complete wealth of news and information about the private space boom and ‘base race’ :)
New Orion Craft Test: Abort Motor November 21, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Ares I, Ares V, Constellation, NASA, Orion (craft), Youtube , add a commentYou know a test went well when it shot flames 100 feet into the air.
Especially when there was video of it:
That is the second (the first being back in April) test of the Orion craft‘s abort motor; the Orion being the successor to the Space Shuttle, and the craft that will get NASA astronauts back to the Moon (with the Altair serving as the lander).
Despite the spectacularly dangerous-looking results, the abort motor is actually a safety feature: it would direct the Orion craft away from the Ares rockets in the event of a launch malfunction.
Waste of Space: A Look at Trash Drying and Water Extraction November 19, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : trash, Waste of Space, water , add a commentThere’s an article from the Cornell Chronicle over at SpaceRef.com about a subject that I see potentially balooning into one of the most problematic and important subjects of moon colonization: dealing with waste. So, welcome to the first edition of a new semi-regular feature series you’ll be seeing here: Waste of Space.
The Cornell article is a feature on a device that by drying, extracts all the water from the astronauts’ trash, thereby both avoiding a lot of trashy problems (stink, trash expansion after rot, etc.) and generating one of the most precious resources in space (by way of a water purifier).
An About.com article puts it best regarding the importance of water recycling to missions:
“Would Columbus have reached the New World if his ships could not carry enough water for their crews? Would Lewis and Clark have made it to the Pacific if they had no fresh water along the way? “
-”NASA Advances Water Recycling for Space Travel and Earth Use“, by Nick Greene, About.com
Water is expensive to shuttle back and forth from space stations, nevermind all the way to the Moon, so any conservation and recycling you can get is golden.
The other aspect, and the one I see becoming of particular interest as lunar colonies (and especially, lunar mining operations) become more and more numerous, is dealing with waste disposal (or lack thereof) and reducing its bulk.
“In space, waste can’t simply be “thrown out.” If astronauts place it outside the airlock, it will orbit alongside their spacecraft. If they eject it away from the spacecraft, they might encounter it again later.”
-”What to do with rotten, smelly garbage when the nearest dumpster is 100 million miles away“, by Melissa Rice, the Cornell Chronicle
As that above picture from the Int’l Space Station demonstrates, trash buildup can get pretty bad in human space habitats (sometimes with spectacularly disastrous results), so this drying technology (being developed by Cornell professor Jean Hunter and the Wisconsin-based Orbital Technologies Corp.) will obviously be invaluable.
I could go on for some length about the severe problems a lot of trash generation from lunar colonies could create, but for now, I’ll leave that for future editions of Waste of Space.
Today, I close out with a golden quote by Jean Hunter, from the Cornell article:
“When people think about garbage in space, they remember the trash compactor scene from “Star Wars” — and believe it or not, there’s some truth to that scene,” Hunter said. “Trash in space is like you saw in the movie: big, wet, nasty and varied”.
:)
Picture of the Week: MoonOne, A Space Odyssey November 17, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Google Lunar X Prize, lander, NASA, Odyssey Moon, Picture of the Week , add a comment
India's Chandrayaan Flags the Moon November 16, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Chandrayaan-1, Current News, Helium-3, Indian Space Research Organization, lander, Peak of Eternal Light, Shackleton, Youtube , 1 comment so far
I’ve been flagging “Chandrayaan” on a lot of my moon posts as of late, but now the Chandrayaan-1 has done me one better, flagging something itself: the Moon.
The craft’s Moon Impact Probe, carrying the Indian Tricolour (pictured above) on its side, landed on the Moon on Friday, making India the fifth (or fourth; videos seems to state fourth, but that linked article from the India Times states fifth) world entity (after the U.S., Russia, Japan, and the 17-nation ESA) to reach the surface of the Moon.
That is a picture the Moon Impact Probe took before impact (from the India Times); the prode landed just 32km from the all-important Shackleton Crater near the South Pole, a very likely location for a future full-fledged colony or colonies (due to its rim being a Peak of Eternal Light, a.k.a. eternal solar power and other benefits). So its likely that future colonists (robotic or otherwise) will come across, or at least take field trips to, this Indian tricolor in the future :)
Below is a great video from CCTV on the Probe’s landing, which rather interestingly, also confirms the active Indian interest in helium-3 (something not mentioned in the official ISRO Moon Impact Probe page):
Chandrayaan-1 Payload Feature #2: Sub KeV Atom Reflecting Analyser (SARA) November 13, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Chandrayaan-1, Chandrayaan-1 Payload Features, Helium-3, Indian Space Research Organization, solar wind, Sweden , add a commentToday is the second in a series of features on each of India‘s recently-launched Chandrayaan-1‘s scientific payloads.
The Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter has 11 scientific instruments onboard to complete an array of measurements: five Indian instruments, and six from other nations and organizations (including the ESA and NASA). Today is the first look at one of the foriegn payloads: the Swedish Sub KeV Atom Reflecting Analyser (SARA).
Sub KeV Atom Reflecting Analyser (SARA)
SARA is a device mainly to study the magnetosphere (or in the case of the Moon, the lack thereof) and solar wind interactions with the lunar surface.
Developed through the ESA in collaboration with the Swedish Institute of Space Physics and the Indian ISRO’s Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, the payload itself is of Swedish development while the data processing unit is Indian.

Solar wind experiments were peformed on the lunar surface during many of the Apollo missions (11, 12, 14, 15, and 16); they analyzed the chemical components of lunar surface in relation to the solar wind, and found that the lunar surface had been enriched with atomic nuclei, including helium-3, a major motivator behind this current base race.
While details on the SARA’s mission are vague, the impression that I get is that the SARA’s additional solar wind analysis, going by the above connection between solar wind and the all-important helium-3, could yield interesting information regarding the chemical composition of the moon, possibly for mining purposes (helium and otherwise). So, perhaps, the result of this seemingly unassuming device could end up being commercially significant.
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Check back within the next couple of days for the next feature, on another of the Indian payloads, as well as for any other updates on the moon mission’s progress that may come along :). You can find the first payload feature (and all the features as they’ll be posted) here.
Twilight Embers: Phoenix Mars Mission Ends November 12, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : Mars, NASA, Phoenix lander, rover, Spirit and Opportunity , add a commentMonths after it was originally anticipated to fall silent, and after discovering both ice and falling snow on Mars, the Phoenix lander has lost contact, and the mission has been declared completed.
A Martian sunrise in late August, marking the oncoming of the winter that eventually doomed the lander. [Photo from UniverseToday.com by way of NASA/JLP/UA)The unexpected durability of the lander could be promising for the efforts of future landers and rovers, including lunar ones.
Check out the official NASA media page on Phoenix for videos recapping the mission.
A related note: The Mars explroation rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, are still kickin’, after nearly five years (more than seventeen times longer than expected).
Considering how much longer ‘than expected’ both the Phoenix and the twin rovers have lasted, could it also happen that completion of lunar bases (being built by, of course, robots) will come much faster ‘than expected’ (with their construction workers potentially proving much hardier and productive workers than predicted)?
Picture of the Week: Hail CESAR November 10, 2008
Posted by Nick Azer in : European Space Agency, Picture of the Week, rover, Youtube , add a comment
That is a picture of the CESAR rover, which won last week’s ESA Lunar Robotics Challenge. Built by a student team from the Bremen University, the rover completed the task of descending down the steep slopes of a 15-meter deep crater, grab a soil sample, and return it (all in darkness).
Check out the CESAR site for details from the team on their rover (and their experience), and below is a Youtube clip of the victorious little guy conquering a hill in practice:
The lunar surface is a challenging environment, and it’ll be a lot of fun to see the variety of designs for rovers that come along, and to see them in action there within the next few years :)


