Spacecraft properties | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Blue Origin |
Payload mass | 4,500 kg (9,900 lb)[1] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 2024 (proposed)[2] |
Rocket | Space Launch System, Atlas V, New Glenn, or Vulcan |
Moon lander | |
Landing site | Lunar south pole |
The Blue Origin Blue Moon is a proposed space cargo carrier and lander for making cargo deliveries to the Moon. Designed and operated by Blue Origin for use on the Blue Moon mission aimed for 2024,[2][3][4] Blue Moon derives from the vertical landing technology used in Blue Origin's New Shepard sub-orbital rocket.[5]
The lander is planned to be capable of delivering 4,500 kg (9,900 lb) to the surface of the Moon.[1] The cargo vehicle could also be used to support NASA activities in cis-lunar space,[6] or transport payloads of ice from Shackleton Crater to support space activities.[7] The first projected mission for the craft would be a 2024 lunar south polar landing mission.[2] It is proposed that a series of landings would could used to deliver the infrastructure for a Moon base.[3][4][8]
Design began on the lander in the 2010s. The lander platform was first publicly revealed in March 2017,[1][9] with a Lunar-surface-delivered payload capacity of 10,000 lb (4,500 kg)[1] at which time the first lunar landing mission was projected for 2020.[3][failed verification]
Blue Origin's president Rob Myerson said that the proposed lander could be optimized to use NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, but could also be launched with Blue Origin's New Glenn and ULA's Atlas V[6][1] and next-generation Vulcan launch vehicle.
In a May 2018 interview, Blue Origin's CEO Jeff Bezos indicated that Blue Origin would build Blue Moon on its own, with private funding, but that they would build it a lot faster if it were done in a partnership with existing government space agencies. Bezos mentioned the December 2017 directive of the Trump Administration to steer NASA to include a lunar mission on the pathway to other beyond Earth orbit (BEO) destinations, and also his support for the Moon Village concept, "a proposal promoted by European Space Agency head Jan Woerner for cooperation among countries and companies to cooperate ... on lunar capabilities."[10]
A BE-3U LOX/Hydrogen rocket engine will be used to place the lander on a trans-Lunar injection trajectory and to begin to decelerate the vehicle for its Lunar surface landing. The lander will "land tail-down" using 49 kilonewtons (11,000 lbf) liquid oxygen/liquid hydrogen thrusters that were under development before April 2017.[1][6]