Space Exploration Made by Spinning Robotic Landers a Hop and Skip
LAUREL, Md. — A former robot contender for the Google Lunar X Prize may  find resurrection as a robotic lander for surface missions to planets  and moons across the solar system. Its secret rests in a spinning  midsection based on proven satellite technology that ensures almost  unshakable stability.
   The spinning lander could land and hop  across alien surfaces on springy legs that have the flexibility  "between a golf club shaft and a fishing pole," said Rex Ridenoure,  president and CEO of Ecliptic Enterprises in Pasadena, Calif. His  company holds pending patents on the space technology that originated  with Harold Rosen, a satellite pioneer.
   One version of the lander intended for an asteroid mission might have  extra detachable harpoon legs to temporarily anchor itself to the rock,  Ridenoure told a crowd of scientists and engineers at the 9th IAA  Low-Cost Planetary Missions Conference here. Another version aimed at  Europa might add a drill for tapping the Jupiter moon's icy secrets.  Whatever the destination, the spinning design ensures a relatively easy landing compared to most space missions.
  "The neat thing is that the thing will not tip over," Ridenoure said. "The thing will just hop and bounce and skitter until it comes to a stop."
  That vision began with Rosen, a former engineer for the Hughes Aircraft  Company who first harnessed spinning back in 1965 as a way to stabilize  satellites holding the same geostationary orbit above the Earth. His  dual-spin design kept the main satellite body spinning while an  instrument platform remained motionless.
  Space explorers such as Galileo have also used the dual-spin concept.  But even after Rosen retired from Hughes Space & Communications (now  Boeing Satellite Systems), he harbored unfulfilled hopes of using  spinning for stabilized robotic landings.
  Rosen got his chance when the Google Lunar X Prize  first debuted in 2007. The lunar landing competition offers a $20  million grand prize for landing a robot on a lunar surface, having it  travel at least 1,650 feet (500 meters) and send data and images back to  Earth.
  The Southern California Selene Group formed by Rosen to compete in the  Google Lunar X Prize included Ridenoure at Ecliptic Enterprises. The  team designed a three-legged robotic contender, but eventually withdrew  from the competition in 2008 after expressing philosophical differences  with the X Prize Foundation's vision for commercializing space and human  exploration.
  But the spinning lander concept has not died.
  Rosen handed off the technology to Ecliptic, and the company is now fielding queries from anyone interested in a possible low-cost lander mission.  For comparison, the Southern California Selene Group had planned on a  total mission cost of $20 million to $30 million while competing for the  X Prize.
  The spinning lander is small enough to reach many solar system targets  by riding aboard a private Falcon 9 rocket developed by the commercial  spaceflight firm SpaceX, Ridenoure said. And there is always the  opportunity to pull up stakes and move if the original landing site  doesn't work out.
  "Once you get down on the surface, if you rotate the payload around and  don't like the site, you can hop to another one," Ridenoure said.
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