Andrew (AJ) Gemer, the Chief Technology Officer and co-founder of Lunar Outpost, shares groundbreaking insights on lunar mobility solutions. He discusses the innovative rovers designed for lunar exploration and the crucial role of commercial companies in this venture. AJ also outlines partnerships with NASA and challenges faced in lunar operations. Listeners will hear about exciting projects like the Hippo rover, aimed at extracting lunar resources, and the importance of testing rovers in realistic conditions to ensure mission success on the Moon.
51:25
forum Ask episode
web_stories AI Snips
view_agenda Chapters
auto_awesome Transcript
info_circle Episode notes
question_answer ANECDOTE
AJ Gemer's Space Journey
AJ Gemer has been passionate about space and machines since he was a kid.
His path took him through aerospace engineering and space science projects focused on lunar dust.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Building Rovers Hands-On
Lunar Outpost was founded with a hands-on, build-and-test approach, avoiding vaporware.
Their first MAP rover was quietly developed and then unveiled driving in a lunar testbed facility.
question_answer ANECDOTE
MAP Rover Moon Debut
The third-generation MAP rover flew on IM2 and survived a tipped-over landing for 2.7 hours on the moon.
It successfully returned valuable data and achieved TRL 9 on key subsystems despite the lander mishap.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
This week, we're joined by AJ Gemer of Lunar Outpost, a fast-moving company innovating in cislunar technology. This includes mini-rovers, crewed lunar rovers, and all kinds of instrumentation that will enable lunar exploration, development, and in-situ resource development. AJ talked about the company, their many projects, their relationship with NASA, and the future of lunar exploration and the role of commercial companies moving ahead. Join us!
Headlines:
Space Burial Goes Awry - A prototype capsule carrying cremated human remains successfully reached orbit but crashed into the Pacific Ocean when its parachute failed to deploy, resulting in an unintended burial at sea for the Celestis payload aboard The Exploration Company's test mission
Daytime Fireball Strikes Georgia - A rare bright meteor visible during daylight hours punched through a house roof in Georgia, with meteorite fragments found in the living room; the fireball was tracked at 30,000 mph and may be linked to the Daylight Beta Taurid meteor shower
Axiom-4 Mission Success - After multiple delays totaling 28 hours due to ISS issues, the Axiom-4 crew successfully docked with the space station, bringing the first astronauts from India, Poland, and Hungary to the ISS, led by veteran commander Peggy Whitson
Main Topic: Lunar Outpost's Moon Mobility Solutions
Company Overview - Lunar Outpost is pioneering commercial lunar mobility services with rovers of various sizes, positioning itself as the leader in planetary surface mobility from their Colorado headquarters
MAPP Rover on Lunar Voyage 1 - Despite the Intuitive Machines lander tipping over, Lunar Outpost's MAPP rover survived the landing and operated for 2.7 hours, validating all key subsystems and achieving TRL 9 status while carrying Nokia's 4G LTE communication system
Testing Philosophy - The company emphasizes rapid iteration with multiple rover launches per year rather than traditional single high-value missions every 6-8 years, using Earth analogs, including a 1,000-acre Colorado test facility with statistically representative lunar terrain
Eagle LTV Design - Unveiled at Space Symposium, the lunar terrain vehicle features a sci-fi-inspired aesthetic that's both beautiful and functional, developed with partners including General Motors, Goodyear, MDA Space, and Leidos
Commercial Applications - The LTV will operate autonomously between Artemis missions, serving commercial customers for payload delivery, sample collection, and infrastructure development, with plans for tens to hundreds of vehicles creating a "work truck for the moon" fleet
Upcoming Missions - Lunar Voyage 2 (launching early 2025) will carry NASA-funded science instruments to the lunar equator, followed by additional commercial missions and Australia's first moon rover nicknamed "Roo-ver"
HIPPO Rover - A 1,000+ kg mobile ISRU (in-situ resource utilization) processing plant capable of extracting, refining, and compressing lunar resources for storage and transport
Mars Aspirations - While focused on the moon, Lunar Outpost sees pathways to Mars operations, noting that the Martian environment is somewhat less challenging than the harsh lunar day-night cycles
Team Heritage - AJ Gemer brings experience from multiple planetary