Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Suzuki takes its expertise to the Moon in seeking the Google Lunar Xprize

Add as a preferred source on Google

Suzuki will partner with Japanese lunar exploration team Hakuto, the automaker announced yesterday. Through the partnership, Suzuki will provide technical support to help develop Hakuto’s lunar rover to compete for the Google Lunar Xprize (GLXP).

The GLXP — also known as Moon 2.0 — challenges privately funded space exploration teams to land a robotic spacecraft on the lunar surface, and to direct the craft to travel 500 meters and capture and transmit high-definition images and data back to Earth, within a December 2017 deadline. Sixteen teams remain in the competition.

Recommended Videos

“Our sympathy with Hakuto challenging the dream with a small rover made us decide to support the project, as we ourselves have been contributing to creating affluent societies through manufacturing small cars,” Toshihiro Suzuki, Suzuki’s President, CEO, and COO, said in a press release.

Haktuo is the only Japanese team competing for the GLXP. The team of interdisciplinary scientists and engineers is supported by Tokyo-based startup Ispace Technologies, whose mission is to develop interconnected micro-robots to survey outer space for resource identification.

The Japanese team’s biggest obstacles include developing a rover that is lightweight and maneuverable on the Moon’s rocky surface. Hakuto hopes Suzuki’s automotive manufacturing experience will assist in decreasing weight and maintaining traction control.

“Since weight saving [for] the rover and four-wheel-drive technology are essential, we feel assured as Suzuki joins us,” Hakuto team leader Takeshi Hakamada said in a press release. “We will consider incorporating Suzuki’s technologies nurtured through manufacturing small cars into the rover.”

The team’s current rover design, Pre-Flight Model 3, is equipped with a 360-degree camera, solar panels, a carbon-fiber hull, and specialized wheels to navigate the powdery terrain.

Hakuto faces stiff competition though. For example, one of the GLXP’s leading and most innovative contenders is an Israeli nonprofit organization called SpaceIL, which plans to accomplish the 500-meter trek by hopping — rather than driving — across the Moon, using rocket propulsion.

Dyllan Furness
Former Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
This jacket pulls drinking water straight from the air
Engineers at UT Austin have developed a wearable textile that harvests ambient moisture into drinkable water.
Image showing person wearing a jacket with special fiber that pulls water from air

Engineers at the University of Texas at Austin have built a jacket that pulls drinkable water directly from the air, offering a potential solution for hikers, soldiers, agricultural workers, and emergency responders who operate far from reliable water sources.

How the jacket collects water

Read more
Google built an AI that can see football plays before they happen
DeepMind’s latest research predicts player movement up to eight seconds into the future
Google Deepmind TacticAI Featured

Football managers spend countless hours analyzing corners, free kicks, and player positioning in search of tiny competitive advantages. Google DeepMind believes artificial intelligence can make that process significantly faster, and its latest project, TacticAI, is designed to do exactly that. TacticAI is a football-specific AI assistant capable of modeling player movement, forecasting future play dynamics, and even recommending tactical adjustments for corner kicks. One of its standout abilities is predicting player trajectories up to eight seconds into the future using only broadcast-style visual data.

TacticAI was built with Liverpool FC and validated by football experts

Read more
Radical new coffee-making method uses sound, skips hot water and reduces energy bills
UNSW reserachers brewed espresso with room-temperature water and ultrasonic sound waves, cutting energy use by 75% in blind tests that fooled 100 regular drinkers.
Person brewing espresso in a lab with a modified ultrasonic espresso machine

Researchers at UNSW Sydney have figured out how to brew espresso-strength coffee without heating any water. The method replaces hot water and high pressure with ultrasonic sound waves, and in blind taste tests involving 100 regular coffee drinkers, participants could not tell the two apart.

How it works

Read more