An illustration of a future human settle on the moon, part of Popular Mechanics article from the October 2004 issue. PAUL DIMARE For dec...
An illustration of a future human settle on the moon, part of Popular Mechanics article from the October 2004 issue. PAUL DIMARE |
Human beings set foot on the moon 50 years ago, but since then, no one has really figured out how best to utilize Earth's closest celestial neighbor. Earlier this month, with an executive order allowing U.S. companies to mine the moon, the Trump administration opened the door to a possible commercial future on the lunar surface.
It was a moment many proponents of lunar commercialization never thought they’d see.
“You have direct interest from the White House in making this happen right now, which is sort of remarkable,” George Sowers, a space mining researcher and professor of engineering at the Colorado School of Mines, tells Popular Mechanics. “From that standpoint I think the future's pretty rosy.”
This executive order put an exclamation point on the debate over the U.S’s attitude toward the Space Treaty of 1967.
Signed during the Cold War, the treaty banned national sovereignty over off-world bodies but didn’t forbid their commercialization. The 60-year-old treaty suffered a mortal blow in 2015 when the Obama administration signed the U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act that made it legal for Americans to own and sell commodities collected off-planet.
This new executive order makes it plain that the current administration is supporting the idea. But it takes more than pen ink to open the moon for mining. The technical and economic challenges of such an endeavor have proven formidable since the idea first emerged in the 1960s.
There's A Very Strong Camp At NASA That Sees The Moon As A Distraction.
“We've just been moving in a circle for a long time,” says Sowers. Undaunted, an international group of industrialists, engineers, and scientists have spent decades inventing the infrastructure needed to make the moon an industrial outpost. Experiments and prototypes for a possible lunar mine have emerged from government and private labs. Critical areas, like compact power generation, space robotics, and regolith mining, have advanced to the point where the scheme not only makes sense but is actually possible.
New Millennium, Old Battle
The story of moon mining truly begins when a schism formed between two titans of rocket science. In one corner is Wernher von Braun, the pioneering German-American rocket scientist who led NASA'S development of the Saturn V rocket. To von Braun and his supporters, planets were the crown jewels of the solar system—where the best science and most prestige can be found.
An illustration of lunar mining from the October 2004 cover of Popular Mechanics |
Although he's never acknowledged it, Elon Musk is this idea personified with his ultimate focus on establishing a colony on Mars. The push for a crewed Mars mission is the dream and anything else—especially the moon—is a distraction. In the other corner, is American physicist Gerard K. O'Neill. In his 1976 book The High Frontier, he advocated for keeping infrastructure off planets, avoiding the energy-sapping demands of escaping their gravity—the hardest and most expansive part of spaceflight.
Orbital colonies are quintessential O’Neillian projects, but he advocated leveraging the moon’s resources to make these massive, rotating space stations a reality. Jeff Bezos, founder of Blue Origin, strongly supports this idea, and even advocated for O’Neill worlds during the reveal of the Blue Moon lunar lander in May last year.
“We've never done a study or taken a survey, to my knowledge, but my sense is that NASA is very heavily weighted towards the von Braunian perspective,” says Philip Metzger, a 30-year NASA veteran and planetary physicist at the University of Central Florida.
“We've never done a study or taken a survey, to my knowledge, but my sense is that NASA is very heavily weighted towards the von Braunian perspective,” says Philip Metzger, a 30-year NASA veteran and planetary physicist at the University of Central Florida.
“NASA has this vision of exploring Mars and wanting to put the first humans on Mars. It will be a brilliant triumph, and so NASA wants to lead the way. There's a very strong camp at NASA that sees the moon as a distraction.” The battle between these camps will play out as NASA pushes deeper into the solar system. What moon mining enthusiasts fear the most is a repeat of what followed the 1970s moonshots.
“If we can support Earth's economy with off-planet industry, then we can create the economic environment where Mars missions become affordable,” says Metzger, an avowed O’Neillian. “We argue that if we go too fast and if we skip the buildup of industry in cislunar space, then the Mars missions are going to end up with another Apollo-era withdrawal.”
What’s For Sale?
Even among O’Neillians who agree that the moon’s resources should be tapped, there is no consensus on how to do it. Even the most basic question—what should be extracted and sold—has changed over time. The moon has many attractive commodities, including metals for construction, silicon for solar panels, and Helium-3 that could be used in hypothetical fusion reactors. The prevailing idea was to mine things that are common on the moon but rare on Earth, and bring it back planetside to sell for a tidy sum.
Over time, the question became: What if the money could be made selling commodities for use in space instead of bringing them to market down the gravity well? The commodity of choice for this kind of mining was oxygen. “The moon is 42 percent oxygen by mass and the biggest cost of spaceflight is launching oxygen,” says Metzger.
The National Nuclear Safety Administration (NNSA) and NASA engineers lower the wall of the vacuum chamber around the KRUSTY system. NASA |
The idea was to extract oxygen for use as fuel and in life support systems but import any needed hydrogen from Earth. (NASA is still looking at this possibility.) This kind of mining can be done anywhere on the moon by scraping the O2-infused regolith. But now there is a strong case to utilize the moon’s trove of hydrogen, and that means chasing large concentrations of lunar ice collected in craters.
“The ice angle is the biggest thing that's changed since the post-Apollo days. And it's fairly recent,” says Sowers. “You can split water into hydrogen and oxygen, the most efficient chemical propellants known. You have rocket fuel.”. It all comes down to harvesting ice, and as the Earth’s closest neighbor, the moon is a logical place to mine it. There have been a fleet of remote sensing spacecraft orbiting the moon, from the groundbreaking Clementine probe to the modern Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, and they have discovered troves of permanent ice inside deep, dark craters.
“The ice angle is the biggest thing that's changed since the post-Apollo days. And it's fairly recent,” says Sowers. “You can split water into hydrogen and oxygen, the most efficient chemical propellants known. You have rocket fuel.”. It all comes down to harvesting ice, and as the Earth’s closest neighbor, the moon is a logical place to mine it. There have been a fleet of remote sensing spacecraft orbiting the moon, from the groundbreaking Clementine probe to the modern Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, and they have discovered troves of permanent ice inside deep, dark craters.
More than a decade ago, a spacecraft named LCROSS crashed into a permanently shadowed crater as a follow-on spacecraft sampled the resulting plume. The sensors determined the plume’s mass registered more than 5 percent water. So there is ice down there, but researchers still have plenty of questions about it. “Now we are in an era where we are moving from discovery to a stage of characterization and validation,” says Julie Stopar, staff scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute.
NASA’s Kilopower project (pictured) could help provide nuclear power for settlements on the moon...and maybe even Mars. NASA |
NASA has funded a new crop of small missions, often awarded to new space companies, to send a flock of rovers to explore the moon. The Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) first robotic mission is due to launch next year, with more to follow. Landers will have arms that scoop soil and spectrometers to glean their chemical composition. Vehicles like the MoonRanger will roll out with sensors to measure the composition of the regolith, including water content.
The crowning mission will be 2022’s VIPER, the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover. Armed with a suite of equipment, including a drill, this car-sized machine will help craft the first water resource map of the moon. “Viper will provide the first and best ground-truth of our knowledge of water-ice's distribution, abundance, form, and surface environmental conditions, in an area that will either be where the Artemis [NASA’s crewed mission] astronauts land or in a very similar location,” says Stopar.
“That will be the real moment of clarity that will make the pole seem like a place we can actually land and live as humans, or not.” These missions all support NASA's future, inhabited lunar base, but the information will also be useful for miners. There are many open questions about how, and especially when, asteroids brought water to the moon. By figuring out this history, predictions about what’s inside the craters will improve.
“Right now we don't even have a very good model of the resources on the moon,” Metzger says. “Anything we do on the moon to get more data is going to improve our understanding of the geology.” While helpful, no existing CLPS missions are plumbing the craters where the most ice is thought to exist. Advocates of deep crater mining, like Sowers, want more pinpoint data about places they can set up operations.
We Are Moving From Discovery To A Stage Of Characterization And Validation.
“Right now we don't even have a very good model of the resources on the moon,” Metzger says. “Anything we do on the moon to get more data is going to improve our understanding of the geology.” While helpful, no existing CLPS missions are plumbing the craters where the most ice is thought to exist. Advocates of deep crater mining, like Sowers, want more pinpoint data about places they can set up operations.
“We've never landed in one of these permanently shadowed regions with perceptive instruments to be able to sample and confirm with high confidence that the ice exists,” he says. “We also don't know the state of the ice and how it's mixed in with the regolith.” Wherever there is a challenge, there are aerospace engineers working on a solution.
Animation of deep space. NASA |
Lockheed Martin is sponsoring a team of NASA staffers, aerospace industry employees, and entrepreneurs within the Colorado School of Mines to create a probe called Veritas, using the company’s McCandless Lunar Lander in a CLPS-sized effort to prove the water ice is there.
The lander would descend into the darkness packing enough batteries to last a full day.
After landing, the Veritas craft would eject around six small, sensor-studded packages they call “squirrels” for about 200 meters in all directions. Using ground-penetrating radar and the returns from the squirrels, the lander can survey a wide area without the weight, cost, or limitations of a rover. Once the secrets of the water ice are determined, the next question becomes how to process it into rocket fuel. That, too, has evolved over time into competing ideas and heightened levels of ambition.
Hot Times On The Moon