Watch CBS News

CU Boulder Students Help Launch New Lunar Mission

BOULDER, Colo. (CBS4)- There is a new moon mission in the works and students at the University of Colorado in Boulder are at the center of it all. Their plan is to send hundreds of tiny spacecraft to the moon; each one will only be the size of a leaf.

glee moon
(credit: CBS)

Arvind Aradhy a graduate student at CU is helping launch "The Great Lunar Expedition for Everyone" also known as GLEE.

Apollo 11: 50 Years Later
Astronaut Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the moon near the leg of the lunar module Eagle during the Apollo 11 mission. Mission commander Neil Armstrong took this photograph with a 70mm lunar surface camera. (Image: NASA)

"It's something an opportunity to get involved and actually put stuff on the moon," Aradhy said.

BOULDER LEAF SPACECRAFT 10PKG_frame_560
(credit: CBS)

The name and the idea behind the mission started with Colorado Space Grant Director Chris Koehler.

"People were talking to us about what are you going to do for the 50th anniversary and I said. 'Let's stop celebrating and let's start doing, again' so that's where the idea came from. What could we do that got the next generation excited about going to the moon again," he said.

The mission is to hitch a ride to the moon and deploy 500 LunaSats, or tiny spacecraft, onto its surface by 2023.

Each of the leaf-sized spacecraft will include a handful of data sensors, programmed by teams of students from around the world.

BOULDER LEAF SPACECRAFT 10PKG_frame_956
(credit: CBS)

"Because there is so many of them you can have students from all over participate in developing those missions for individual satellites," Koehler said.

Before any of it can happen, the team at University of Colorado must engineer the tiny spacecraft so it is easy to use, develop a module to deliver it on to the moon's surface and build awareness around the project to ensure its global success.

APOLLO FLIGHT DIRECTOR 5PKG_frame_120
(credit: CBS)

"It's probably aiming for the moon, literally," Aradhy laughed, "but also if we get that kind of support and that kind of involvement in a team maybe at some point we can support grander ambitions of space exploration,"

You can learn more about the mission by following along on social media or visiting their website at https://www.glee2023.org/

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.