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LunarLeaper - Unlocking a Subsurface World

Simon C. Stähler, Anna Mittelholz, Hendrik Kolvenbach, Philip Arm, Valentin Bickel, Joseph Church, Svein‐Erik Hamran, Adrian Fuhrer, Michael Gschweitl, E. D. Krasnova, Ramon Margarit, Jordan Aaron, Sofía Coloma, Matthias Grott, Marco Hutter, Özgür Karatekin, Miguel Olivares-Mendez, Birgit Ritter, Johan O. A. Robertsson, Krzysztof Walas

Year
2025
Citations
2

Abstract

LunarLeaper is a mission concept designed to robotically explore subsurface lava tubes on the Moon. Lunar pits, steep-walled collapse features, are thought to be connected to such lava tube systems and more than 300 have been identified through remote sensing. These natural subsurface structures hold immense value for exploration and scientific investigations, because they offer protection from radiation, micrometeorites, and harsh temperature fluctuations on the lunr surface and as such, they have been proposed for possible future human habitation. In addition, the extent, nature and duration of lunar volcanism is poorly understood and the uniquely exposed stratigraphy along the pit walls might hold crucial information on the volcanic history if the Moon. However, current orbital imaging lacks sufficient resolution to confirm these connections, making ground-truth exploration essential. LunarLeaper aims to address these knowledge gaps by deploying a lightweight (

Keywords

Geology

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