Why did NASA hold an ice-breaking robot competition?

Why did NASA hold an ice-breaking robot competition?
Why did NASA hold an ice-breaking robot competition?

Published on June 30, 2024 at 2:42 p.m. / Modified on June 30, 2024 at 6:16 p.m.

While NASA is working to bring humans back to the Moon via the Artemis program, other projects are moving forward in a completely different environment. It was in Huntsville, Alabama, that the American space agency organized a robot competition in June, the Break the Ice Challenge! The goal: to find the one who will be able to break the ice to collect water on our satellite.

To cut the suspense short: the winner is called Fracture. This four-wheeled rover, developed by a California couple behind the company Terra Engineering, has a drill and a bearing that allows a series of scrapers to reach for rocks on the surface and grind them into dust in the hope of extracting ice. “The rover is both robust and durable enough to traverse rocky landscapes and survive the harsh conditions at the South Pole of the Moon,” said challenge leader Kim Krone. Adding that it filled “technology gaps that we had identified.”

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