Next NASA Centennial Challenge Competition
Andrew-Unit writes "NASA today announced the next competition in the Centennial Challenge series. A prize of $250,000 USD will be awarded to the team that can autonomously deliver the most lunar regolith to a collection device in 30 minutes. From the press release: 'This challenge continues NASA's efforts to broaden interest in innovative concepts ... We hope to see teams from a broad spectrum of technical areas take part in this competition,'"
NASA, if very, very cagey can do what they want on a pittance, letting people knock each other over trying to do for piddly prizes. Of course, Richard Branson will probably end up owning the Moon anyway...
*Prizes not necessarily in order. Actual prize amount may vary. NASA employees and their family members not eligible (especially if an abnormal amount of materiel is missing from NASA) Offer subject to withdrawal at whim of sponsor or Congress.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Now where did I leave my Saturn V and lunar lander? Maybe I can get one on Ebay?
We get to see a published set of standards, an open competition, and the winner isn't based on who has taken whom to dinner.
Wow! Making awards based on what one has accomplished rather than who one knows. This could have a major impact on business integrity if it's widely adopted.
Abstinence is a government conspiracy. www.SafeSexZone.co
Millions of years of evolution.
Thousands of years of painstaking acquisition of knowledge.
Decades of space exploration.
The next big challenge:
-- How to get dirt into a bucket. --
"How do I get out of this chicken shit outfit?"
"A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
GeneralEmergency
Have they already ruled out a guy with a shovel? I bet John Henry would break down less often, as well as maneuvering around objects more quickly.
I know, let's put a penal colony on the moon! That way, we'd have cheap labor there, and could remove troublesome elements from our society. At least until they start raining gravity bombs on our head...
Seriously, though, a guy with a shovel is at least a viable option. Abrasive lunar dust is gonna suck for anything out there, and spacesuits may well be cheaper then gears for robots.
--LWM
Will the difference in gravity between Earth and the moon make a difference in the performance of these devices?
Oh, and will any of them bounce over craters, and have massive 2 directional (front and above) firepower?
I only look human.
My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
Catterpillar. Oh wait... there's probably weight restrictions.
Perhaps you are missing that you can't vacuum so well on an airless rock, since the whole idea of a vacuum cleaner depends on there being some air pressure to work with.
"b. Teams are required to pay a registration fee of $300."
So it's going to cost you to enter your Hungry Hippos idea.
I'm just going to buy a Roomba and spray-paint my name on it.