Skip to main content

NASA wants your help designing a mini payload for moon exploration

If you have a genius idea for a tiny exploratory robot, then NASA wants to hear from you. The space agency is calling on the public to submit their designs for miniature rovers which could be used to explore the moon as part of the Artemis project or even help establish a long-term moon base in the “Honey, I Shrunk the NASA Payload” challenge.

“As human space exploration evolves toward a permanent presence on the lunar surface, In situ Resource Utilization (ISRU) will become increasingly important,” the challenge website states. “Resupply missions are very expensive. We need to develop practical and affordable ways to identify and use lunar resources, so that our astronaut crews can become more independent of Earth.”

One key part of NASA’s lunar strategy is to identify resources on the moon that astronauts can make use of: “Future astronauts have to be able to locate and collect lunar resources and then transform them into the essentials for life: Breathable air, water for drinking and food production, building materials for shelter, rocket propellants, and more. Our mission capabilities will rapidly increase when useful products can be created from in-situ resources.”

The JPL-led challenge is seeking tiny payloads no larger than a bar of soap for a miniaturized Moon rover.
The JPL-led challenge is seeking tiny payloads no larger than a bar of soap for a miniaturized Moon rover. NASA

That’s where rovers come in. NASA is already working on a full-sized rover, VIPER, which will search for water on the moon. However, a full-sized rover is large and heavy, requiring a lot of power to operate. Smaller rovers, around the size of a bar of soap,  would be able to perform the same mapping and exploration functions but with much lower requirements.

“Smaller payloads are game-changing,” Sabah Bux, a technologist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab, said in a statement. “They will allow us to develop technologies to do more prospecting and science on smaller, more mobile platforms.”

As well as tiny rovers for finding resources, NASA is also interested in small rovers for performing science operations or which could help support a sustained human presence on the moon.

The challenge is to design a rover with the maximum external dimensions of 100mm by 100mm by 50mm. Following the design phase, there will be new challenges for the prototyping, testing, and creation of these rovers. For the first design round, there is a total of $160,000 in prize money to be split across two categories: Rovers for locating lunar resources, and rovers for exploring the lunar environment.

Find out more about the challenge on the HeroX website.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
Scientists want your help to search for black holes
An illustration of a black hole.

Even though black holes swallow anything that comes near them -- even light -- they are still possible to locate by looking for signs of their effects. Black holes are extremely dense, so they have a lot of mass and a strong gravitational effect that can be observed from light-years away. But the universe is a big place, and researchers are hoping that the public can help them to identify more black holes in the name of scientific exploration.

A project called Black Hole Hunter invites members of the public to search through data collected by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) to look for signs of a black hole. Using a technique called gravitational microlensing, citizen scientists will look at how the brightness of light from various stars changes over time, looking for indications that a black hole could have passed in front of a star and bent the light coming from it. This should enable the project to identify black holes that would otherwise be invisible.

Read more
NASA delays first crewed Artemis missions to the moon
An illustration showing astronauts on the moon.

NASA has delayed its plan to send four astronauts on a flyby of the moon in the Artemis II mission in November, announcing that it will now take place no earlier than September 2025.

In the same announcement made on Tuesday, NASA chief Bill Nelson said that the first crewed landing, originally planned for 2025 as part of Artemis III, will now launch in September 2026 at the earliest.

Read more
Fly your name to the moon as part of historic NASA mission
An illustration of NASA's Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) on the lunar surface.

Illustration of NASA's Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) on the surface of the Moon NASA Ames/Daniel Rutter / NASA Ames/Daniel Rutter

NASA likes to bring its missions closer to space fans around the world -- especially to the younger generation to get them interested in science subjects -- and part of these efforts involves the chance for people to fly their names on spacecraft heading off to explore parts of our solar system.

Read more