Astrobotic Technology Inc. said Feb. 6 it signed a contract with Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) to reserve a dedicated Falcon 9 launch for the robotic rover the Pittsburgh-based company hopes to land on the Moon by the end of 2013 to win the $30 million Google Lunar X Prize.

Astrobotic Technology President David Gump declined to say what the company will pay for the launch, but said the decision came down to price and convenience.

โ€œBecause itโ€™s a race and we need to get things done quickly we donโ€™t want to have the dual problem of translating what we want to do into somebody elseโ€™s language, plus all the hurdles of ITAR,โ€ Gump said Feb. 11, referring to the International Traffic in Arms Regulations that govern U.S. technology exports. โ€œWe also are favored by the fact that SpaceX has the most effective launch service that we know of.โ€

SpaceX spokeswoman Kirstin Brost declined Feb. 9 to discuss the terms of the deal. According to the Hawthorne, Calif.-based companyโ€™s website, Falcon 9 launches cost between $49.9 million and $56 million, depending on payload and destination. SpaceX offers a 10 percent discount to Google Lunar X Prize contestants.

Astrobotic intends to offset the cost of the Falcon 9 launch by carrying commercial and government payloads to the lunar surface. Astroboticโ€™s rover and lander are being designed by Carnegie Mellon University to weigh a combined 606 kilograms, including 110 kilograms of spare payload capacity Gump said Astrobotic hopes to sell for $1.8 million to $2 million per kilogram, depending on whether the piggyback payloads ride along on the lander or the rover. The company also is open to sharing the Falcon 9 with small satellites or other payloads needing a ride to lunar orbit or a nearby destination.

 

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