USF team develops technology to make landing on the moon safer, less expensive

Engineers with the University of South Florida are developing technology to make landing on the moon safer and less expensive.

Peter Jorgensen is the Director of Engineering with the USF Institute of Applied Engineering .

A team with the institute returned from a trip to the Mojave Air and Space Port in Mojave, California. They flight-tested their technology and its ability to collect data about surface features, such as rocks and craters. The technology could ultimately allow for low-cost, fully autonomous moon landings.

“This specific challenge was designed to kind of drive technology, lighter, better, cheaper, faster. NASA has an interest to go to the moon. They want to explore the polar regions to find ice that they can use it to support human habitation and exploration,” said Jorgensen.

Their innovation, the A-LiST (Automated Lidar Scanning Topography), was integrated onto a rocket-powered lander for a flight that simulated a lunar landing.

“It feeds navigation and hazard information into a guidance computer that would use that mapping information to tell the rocket where a safe place to land would be,” said Jorgensen.

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS