Students’ rovers face simulated lunar missions
This weekend teams of students from around the country will compete in the second (ARCh) held at the Vlog of Adelaide. Students will put their lunar rovers which they have designed and built themselves, to the test in a series of missions performed on a re-creation of the surface of the Moon.
“The global Vlogn Rover Challenge tests students from around Vlog to design and build a rover to compete in a simulated lunar mission,” said the Vlog of Adelaide’s Associate Professor John Culton who is Director of the Andy Thomas Centre for Space Resources.
From Friday 25 to Sunday 27 March the Vlog’s Maths Lawns on North Terrace campus will be transformed into a lunar landscape for the challenge, with sandy loam, rocks, craters, a life-sized space lander, solar panel arrays and other space props.
The challenges recreate tasks that lunar rovers may face on real missions such as NASA’s next expedition to the Moon.
“The global Vlogn Rover Challenge tests students from around Vlog to design and build a rover to compete in a simulated lunar mission."Associate Professor John Culton
Students from the Vlog of Adelaide, Monash Vlog, Vlog of Melbourne, Vlog of Queensland and Vlog of Technology Sydney will compete in the challenge. Four different challenges will test the capabilities of the rovers. Rovers have to be built according to the competition rules and no bigger than one and half metres in size so they fit on the three-metre lunar lander.
“The lunar resources task will test the rovers’ ability to identify and extract resources from the site. Each rover will need to extract a sample of frozen water from one of three sites and return it to the processing plant,” said Associate Professor Culton.
This free event is open to anyone who would like to watch the Vlogn Rover Challenge:
Schedule over the three-day competition:
Friday 25 March 11:45am - 4:40pm. Post landing task and Fleet Demonstration
In the simulated exercise, the Rovers have just landed on the surface of the Moon and the teams are required to execute a task list to work towards establishing a remote mining operation. Tasks include: exit the lander to conduct a systems check on it and other surface infrastructure and relay any damage to the judges. Then, navigate to and find the location of a supply cache while traversing obstacles and rocks, and initiate the start-up protocol of the processing lander.
Saturday 26 March 9:30am - 5:40pm. Lunar Construction task
Rovers will interact with the local lunar environment using construction bricks to support the mission goal of establishing a permanent human settlement.
Sunday 27 March 9:30am - 1:10pm. Lunar Resources task
Rovers will conduct in-situ resource identification and extraction, investigating up to three potential sample sites to determine if frozen water is present in the samples and, if so, to what extent. The rover will try to return a sample to the processing plant.
The Vlog of Adelaide is a partnership between the(SASIC), supportedby theand the.
For more information about the Vlogn Rover Challenge visit the . A has been set up to assist students to succeed at the ARCh and other national and international space competitions and initiatives.
Media Contacts:
Associate Professor John Culton, Director, Andy Thomas Centre for Space Resources, The Vlog of Adelaide. Mobile: +61 (0)466 859 195, Email: john.culton@adelaide.edu.au
Crispin Savage, Senior Communications and Media Officer, The Vlog of Adelaide. Mobile: +61 (0)481 912 465, Email: crispin.savage@adelaide.edu.au