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Open Lunarians,
 
Amid ongoing changes in global policy, science and space exploration, Open Lunar is proud to strongly invest in research, effective governance, and sustainable space development. 
 
Recent global developments prompt us to reexamine our methods while sticking to our core values of transparency, collaboration, and fair decision-making. At Open Lunar, we continue to seek practical and innovative alternatives to enhance our governance approaches. 
 
As lunar activities expand globally, our mission becomes even more important. We welcome everyone interested in a secure, thoughtful community where technology and governance evolve together.
 
Rachel Williams, Acting Executive Director
From the Blog 
Lunar News
The Road to a Moonbase Goes through Advanced Navigation Based on Open Standards
 
By Jatan Mehta, Open Lunar Science Communications Lead
Illustration of ESA’s Moonlight navigation satellites operating in lunar orbit. Image: Thales Alenia Space / Briot
Illustration of ESA’s Moonlight navigation satellites operating in lunar orbit. Image: Thales Alenia Space / Briot
On March 3, Firefly’s NASA-funded Blue Ghost lander became the first spacecraft to get GNSS navigation signal fixes on the Moon. The joint Italian-US LuGRE receiver onboard Blue Ghost locked on to GNSS signals from both American GPS and European Galileo satellites—even at distances past 400,000 kilometers. The experiment proved that Earth-based GNSS satellites can help future craft autonomously navigate at the Moon, reducing reliance on more expensive Earth-based tracking.
 
By placing such navigation and communications (navcom) satellites in lunar orbit directly, we can make it even easier for lunar craft to leverage their services with cheaper hardware onboard. NASA hopes to help fund and utilize an initial set of lunar navcom orbiters to not only relieve its bottlenecked Deep Space Network from high demand but also offer some critical redundancy to future missions. ESA plans to deploy a small navcom constellation called Moonlight by 2030, starting with the Lunar Pathfinder communications relay orbiter launching next year. JAXA has similar plans

Notably, these national space agencies are coordinating on a “LunaNet” standard so that their navcom constellations interoperate—in principle—similar to GPS and Galileo systems. As such, future private and national Moon missions from these countries might be able to tap into a wider navcom network. It’s also how these countries could catch up with China’s growing lead in lunar navcom, which has operational and planned satellites.
 
But LunaNet’s interoperability will be basic for these initial navcom satellites, which could constrain the US bloc in the next decade from simultaneously operating numerous craft at the Moon in the build up to an Artemis Moonbase. As such, “enhancing the LunaNet Interoperability Specification (LNIS) is necessary to maximize the effectiveness and success rates of complex missions”, says Dr. Peng Hu, a researcher at the Open Lunar Foundation.
 
Extensions could include network protocols, better security, and resilience for assets that are spread across lunar orbit, the surface, and Earth. To that end, Dr. Hu will perform comparative analysis and simulations to arrive at a lunar navcom configuration that maximizes results across missions with an open, interoperable infrastructure. We can then have repeated precision landings for crew cargo deliveries and even automated science stations. “If some assets fail, having resilience in the network means lower chances of mission failure,” says Dr. Hu. This could incentivize more commercial players and countries to adopt the standard.
 
Resilience in LunaNet will add a safety net for long-duration crewed Moon missions. If something goes wrong with a US navcom asset, say, another country’s interoperable constellation could step in to ensure safety of human lives. “An open protocol facilitates that,” adds Dr. Hu.
Open Lunar News + Updates
Open Lunar is proud to continue to support Lunar Policy Platform in 2025. Earlier this year, Open Lunar awarded LPP a grant to support the following efforts:
  • The production of Lunar Transparency Standards: At present, there is no streamlined way to share information on lunar activities. To address this gap LPP will look to develop guidelines outlining fundamental elements for lunar information sharing (what to share, when, why, by whom, and how).
  • The production of Lunar Science Ethics and Principles: To ensure coordination and alignment between commercial and scientific interests, LPP will identify the main scientific and ethical interests in lunar exploration with the aim of developing a set of principles to support better coordination within the sector.
  • Annual Lunar Policy Snapshot: Following the success of last year’s snapshot, LPP will look to deliver an updated snapshot, which highlights key policy trends in the industry.

Look for us: 
  • Mehak Sarang will be at speaking at MIT AeroAstro's Space Week in April and attending LSIC's Spring Meeting in May.
  • Samuel Jardine will be attending COPUOS Legal Sub-Committee in May.
Get in touch with Sam or Mehak if you'll be there → mehak@openlunar.org, samueljardine@openlunar.org
Community Corner
Introducing Mehak Sarang, Open Lunar’s new Director of Industry Integration
Open Lunar is delighted to announce Mehak Sarang has joined us as the Director of Industry Integration. 
 
Mehak brings significant industry expertise, with experience in lunar lander payload integration and research on strategic lunar development and governance. Mehak has been part of Open Lunar’s journey for several years, first as a fellow, then as an affiliate and now joins our core team! She will be responsible for supporting our projects and fostering partnerships with industry. 

Join Our General Applicant Pool
We recognize there is an incredible amount of talented and passionate individuals looking for their next contribution.
 
Join our general applicant pool so we consider you for our future roles.
 

 
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