NASA's Centennial Challenge to Excavate Moon Dirt Set for May 12

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May 3, 2007

David E. Steitz/Stephanie Schierholz
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1730/4997

William Simon
California Space Authority, Santa Maria, Calif.
805-349-2633 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M07-48

NASA'S CENTENNIAL CHALLENGE TO EXCAVATE MOON DIRT SET FOR MAY 12

WASHINGTON - On Saturday, May 12, teams from around the nation will 
compete for a total of $250,000 from NASA for an autonomously 
operating system to excavate simulated "lunar regolith," or the 
moon's soil. The Regolith Excavation Challenge, one of NASA's seven 
Centennial Challenges, will take place at the Santa Maria Fairpark, 
Santa Maria, Calif. The competition on May 12 from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. 
PDT is free and open to media and the public.

NASA is offering $250,000 to the team whose system can excavate and 
deliver as much regolith as possible in 30 minutes. Competitors' 
machines must use less than 30 W of power, weigh less than 40 kg and 
excavate more than 150 kg of the simulated moon dirt. The unique 
physical properties of lunar regolith make excavation a difficult 
technical challenge, but it is a necessary first step toward 
uncovering the moon's resources.

Teams from Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif., Livermore, Calif., Berkeley, 
Calif., Fulks Run, Va., Rolla, Mo., Berkley, Mich., Milwaukee, and 
Vancouver, British Columbia, have registered to participate in the 
challenge.

The California Space Education and Workforce Institute, an 
organization of the California Space Authority, Santa Maria, is 
administering the challenge at no cost to NASA.

The California RoboChallenge for students in kindergarten through 12th 
grade also will take place at the fairpark, in coordination with the 
Regolith Excavation Challenge. The RoboChallenge runs from 9 a.m. to 
3:30 p.m. May 12 and features speakers Air Force Col. Stephen Tanous, 
30th Space Wing, and Director of NASA's Ames Research Center, S. Pete 
Worden.

For more information about the Regolith Excavation Challenge, visit:

http://www.csewi.org/regolith 

Centennial Challenges, an element of NASA's Innovative Partnerships 
Program, promotes technical innovation through prize competitions to 
make revolutionary advances to support the Vision for Space 
Exploration and NASA goals. For more information about the Innovative 
Partnerships Program and Centennial Challenges, visit: 

http://www.ipp.nasa.gov/cc 

For more information about NASA and other agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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