ULA Teams Up With Bigelow Aerospace to Put Inflatable Spaceship in Lunar Orbit

© Photo : PixabayEarth, Moon
Earth, Moon - Sputnik International
Subscribe
In their joint statement, ULA, the joint venture of Lockheed Martin and Boeing, and start-up company of American businessman Robert Bigelow, announced their plans to launch a spacecraft for long-term lunar exploration and astronaut training.

WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — An expandable spacecraft orbiting the moon by late 2022 will provide a commercial depot for lunar exploration and eventual flights to Mars, according to a press release announcing a joint venture between Bigelow Aerospace private company and United Launch Alliance, which provides spacecraft launch services to the US government.

"This commercial lunar depot would provide anchorage for significant lunar business development in addition to offering NASA and other governments the Moon as a new exciting location to conduct long-term exploration and astronaut training," the release stated.

As a working space station for humans, Bigelow’s B330 expandable module will also complement bigger plans by NASA to eventually put people on Mars, the release explained.

Deep Space Gateway in lunar orbit as proposed in 2017 - Sputnik International
World
Rivals on Earth, Friends in Space: Russian-US Lunar Station Opens New Horizons
The B330 will first be placed in low Earth orbit by a ULA Vulcan 562 rocket, a heavy-payload launch vehicle, which is currently under development with funding by a public–private partnership with the US government, that is projected to have sufficient power to carry the payload into space.

Bigelow Aerospace will then outfit the habitat and demonstrate it is working properly, as ULA sends two fuel shipments and a separate spacecraft to rendezvous with the B330 and propel the capsule to the moon, according to the release.

Bigelow Aerospace company specialises in construction of inflatable habitable space modules. The concept was developed by NASA but dropped after some time and the private company from Nevada managed to purchase the rights to the patents. One of the modules developed by the company, the BEAM, is currently attached to the International Space Station. The module was developed under $17.8 million NASA contract to test the technology and, despite having trouble at first, the module was expanded successfully.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала