New government funding helps UK companies lead the way for future Moon missions
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UK companies are developing new communication and navigation
services needed for future missions to the Moon, thanks to funding
from the UK Space Agency In what will be the world’s first
commercial servicing of its kind, Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd
(SSTL), Inmarsat and MDA UK are among those who won contracts with
the European Space Agency (ESA), worth just over £2 million in
total, to shape the infrastructure for future lunar...Request free trial
UK companies are developing new communication and
navigation services needed for future missions to the Moon, thanks
to funding from the UK Space Agency
In what will be the world’s first commercial servicing of its kind, Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL), Inmarsat and MDA UK are among those who won contracts with the European Space Agency (ESA), worth just over £2 million in total, to shape the infrastructure for future lunar exploration. NASA plans to return to the Moon by 2024 and, working with ESA and other partners, intends to put a Gateway with living quarters for astronauts in lunar orbit. Reliable navigation and telecommunication capabilities are essential for these missions, and others like it, to succeed. Science Minister Amanda Solloway said:
Under ESA’s Moonlight programme Guildford-based SSTL Lunar will lead a consortium, including Airbus in Portsmouth, Goonhilly Earth Station in Cornwall and Nottingham satellite navigation company GMV-NSL, to plan how they could provide data-relay services for communication and navigation around the Moon. Guildford-based SSTL Lunar will lead a consortium to plan how they could provide data-relay services for communication and navigation around the Moon. Credit: SSTL-UK The study will set out the infrastructure required for the consortiums to deliver a constellation of Lunar communication and navigation satellites which would enable surface missions operating on the far side of the Moon, without a line of sight direct to the Earth, to keep constant contact with Earth. It will also provide Lunar navigation signals to support the precision landing of scientific equipment and the operation of rovers. Elodie Viau, ESA’s Director of Telecommunications and Integrated Applications, said:
SSTL’s Managing Director Phil Brownnett said:
A shared communications and navigation service will also reduce the ticket price of Lunar exploration and reduce the design complexity of individual missions, potentially making them lighter and freeing up space for additional payloads. Inmarsat, based in London, and MDA Space and Robotics Ltd (MDA UK), based in the Harwell Science and Innovation Campus in Oxfordshire, are part of a consortium led by Telespazio in Italy investigating the development of a Lunar Communications and Navigation Service (LCNS) to support future science, exploration and commercial activities in orbit above, and on, the lunar surface. Yasrine Ibnyahya, Senior Director, Advanced Concepts and Technologies at Inmarsat, said:
“This lunar project is only the first step to unlock future opportunities. It can become the hub to facilitate human space exploration, further technology developments and perhaps access to new resources.” David Kenyon, Managing Director of MDA Space and Robotics Ltd, said:
The findings from the latest ‘Size and Health of the UK Space Industry’ report, commissioned by the UK Space Agency and published this week, show income from the UK space sector has risen from £15.6 billion to £16.4 billion, representing growth of 5.7% in real terms while employment is up by 3,200 from 41,900 to 45,100. |
