
Robotic ‘Penguin’ Could Hop on
Moon
Raytheon wants NASA to use
probe in 2009 lunar mission
August 30,
2005
LONG BEACH, Calif. — A
robotic Lunar Penguin explorer could be hopping around on the moon by 2009,
Raytheon Co. said Tuesday, as it unveiled the concept lander at an aerospace
conference.
The
unmanned lunar device, in development for two years, is 3 feet (1 meter) tall
and weighs approximately 230 pounds (105 kilograms). It “hops” by reigniting
small propulsion engines.
The
Penguin, unveiled at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Space 2005 Conference, can make a single jump of about six-tenths of a mile (1
kilometer) and could be adapted to make additional jumps, possibly over greater
distances.
President
Bush last year refocused the space program on sending people to the moon, Mars
and beyond. Raytheon said the Penguin could be a robotic precursor to future
manned space missions and was being proposed to NASA.
While still
in the concept stage, the explorer could be launched as early as 2009, said
Karleen Seybold, a senior systems engineer for Raytheon, based in Waltham,
Mass.
The Lunar
Penguin, originally intended to land on the south pole of the moon to search
for ice, is based on tactical weapons technologies, which should make it much
more affordable, Raytheon said. However, the company did not disclose a price.
The lander
sits on four legs, much like a small version of the original landers that
brought astronauts to the moon. The squat, compact unit has a few tiny jump
boosters protruding below and on its sides, and looks nothing like an actual
penguin.
The Penguin
uses rocket engines from ground-based missile defense systems and the guidance
system of a Tomahawk cruise missile.
“Since we
could set it down in such a precise location, the Penguin could be the delivery
vehicle for the science community,” said Seybold said.
Raytheon is
a major military defense technology company but has only a small share of NASA
contracts.