Contract could land Western University tech on the moon - Action News
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Contract could land Western University tech on the moon

Western University's Institute for Earth and Space Exploration has received a multi-million dollar grant to develop an integrated vision system for rovers in space.

The Canadian Space Agency contract is worth more than $690,000

Jayshri Sabarinathan (left), associate director of training and education at Western's Institute for Earth and Space Exploration, and Gordon Osinski were among the team who was successful in receiving a contract from the Canadian Space Agency. (Submitted by Jeffrey Renaud)

Western Universityhas been awarded a multi-million dollar contract by the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) to build a high-tech camera that may be used on rovers for future missions on the moon.

"A lot of people don't know about London, Ontario and Western really becoming an epicentre for space research in Canada and internationally," said Gordon Osinski, director of Western University's Institute for Earth and Space Exploration.

The camera, otherwise known as an integrated vision system, will be able to capture shorter and longer wavelengths compared to a typical smartphone camera, allowingresearchers toget a better look at the composition of the moon's surface.

In addition, it will also have aLight Detection and Rangingcomponent to help researchers explore the moon at night and areas where there are shadows.

"Some of the most scientifically interesting places on the moon are these permanently shadowed regions near both poles where we think there might be water hiding away," Osinski said.

Under the 18-month contract, the CSAwill provide $690,123 toward the initial design and development of the high-tech camera.

Osinski said one of the challenges researchers will have to figure out ishow the camera will survive getting to and staying on the moon's surface.

"Anything you send to another planet has to withstand the extreme temperatures and radiation, so that really doubles and triples the price you might think of for something here on Earth," he said.

"We really are only talking about a few years until we see lots of robots and eventually, humans back on the surface of the moon," he added.

The projectisfunded through the CSA's Lunar Exploration Accelerator Program, where $150 million has been allocated over the next five years to help businesses and post-secondary institutions create new technologies that can be used in lunar orbit or on the moon's surface.

So far, seven contracts have been awardedworth a total of $4.36 million.