Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Aerospace |
Founded | 2010 |
Headquarters | Cape Canaveral, FL 32920 |
Key people | Robert D. Richards, Naveen Jain, Barney Pell |
Website | moonexpress |
Moon Express (MoonEx; vehicle model prefix: MX) is an American privately held company formed in 2010 by a group of Silicon Valley and space entrepreneurs. It had the goal of winning the $30 million Google Lunar X Prize, and of ultimately mining the Moon for natural resources of economic value.[1][2] The company was not able to make a launch attempt to reach the Moon by March 31, 2018, the deadline for the prize.
Since late 2018, and as of February 2020[update], Moon Express focused on supporting NASA under its Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) contract.[3]
MoonEx's machines are designed to look for materials that are scarce on Earth but found in everything from a Toyota Prius car battery to guidance systems on cruise missiles. ... The company is among several teams hoping to someday win the Google Lunar X Prize competition, a $30-million race to the Moon in which a privately-funded team must successfully place a robot on the Moon's surface and have it explore at least 1/3 of a mile. It also must transmit high definition video and images back to Earth before 2016. ... should be ready to land on the lunar surface by 2013.