Article 5HCF4 For lunar cargo delivery, NASA accepts risk in return for low prices

For lunar cargo delivery, NASA accepts risk in return for low prices

by
Eric Berger
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5HCF4)
  • 50926131977_0184d4cc91_k-980x551.jpg

    A rendering of the Nova-C lander on the Moon. [credit: Intuitive Machines ]

Standing on a runway in southeast Houston, Tim Crain had to raise his voice to be heard over the roar of a supersonic jet taking off in the distance.

The present and future have come together at the Houston Spaceport. On an almost daily basis, current NASA astronauts take T-38s out for flights to hone their flying skills or to jet across the country for mission training. A few hundred meters away from the main runway, Intuitive Machines is testing rocket engines to support lunar landings.

Crain is the chief technology officer for Houston-based Intuitive Machines, which is building landers to take cargo to the lunar surface. Intuitive Machines has a mixture of NASA and commercial contracts and has emerged as one of a new generation of mostly small companies seeking to extend the sphere of economic activity to the lunar surface.

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