Zum Inhalt springen
  • de
  • en
  • Lehrstuhl für Raumfahrttechnik
  • TUM School of Engineering and Design
  • Technische Universität München
Technische Universität München
  • Startseite
  • Forschung
    • Robotic Operations
      • RACOON Laboratory
      • Geriatronik
      • CopKa
        • Satellitenkommunikation
        • Teleoperation
        • Betriebskonzept
      • SAINT
      • Abgeschlossene Projekte
        • LISA
        • FORROST
        • Space Mechanism
        • LINKA
        • Third Eye
    • Exploration Technologies
      • AllBert EinStein
      • ALPHA
      • BLTAS
      • Lunar Volatiles Scout
      • PROSPECT & PROSPECT Science Team
      • TherMoS
      • Mikrometeoroiden II
      • Mikrometeoroiden I
      • Beschleunigerentwicklung
      • V-HAB
      • LiSTOT
      • Abgeschlossene Projekte
        • MARVIN
        • LUISE & LUISE-2
        • ROBEX
    • Satellite Technology
      • CubeSats
        • First-MOVE
        • MOVE-II
        • MOVE-III
      • Spacecraft Mechanisms
      • Satellitenkommunikation und Raumfahrtbetrieb
        • MFG
      • Abgeschlossene Projekte
  • Archived Publications
    • Dissertationen
    • Studienarbeiten
    • Veröffentlichungen
  • Alumni
  • Faszination Raumfahrt
    • Informationen zur ESA Astronautenauswahl 2021
    • Wie wird man Astronaut?
    • ESA Astronaut Selection Campaign 2008
    • Aus dem D-2 Tagebuch von Ulrich Walter
    • Meilensteine der Raumfahrt
    • Prof. Harry Oskar Ruppe
    • Sterne und Kosmos
  1. Startseite
  2. Forschung
  3. Exploration Technologies
  4. ALPHA

Point of Contact

Dr.-Ing. Philipp Reiss

Objectives

In-situ resource utilisation mission.
Credit: ESA–K. Oldenburg

ALPHA (also known as ALCHEMIST Phase A/B1) is a payload development of a commercial lunar In-Situ Resource Utilisation (ISRU) demonstration mission of the European Space Agency ESA.

The mission shall focus on closing strategic knowledge gaps for ISRU processes, complementing the characterisation step made by the ESA PROSPECT payload accommodated on the Russian-led Luna Resource mission planned for launch in 2022. The goal of the ISRU mission is to produce water or breathable oxygen on the Moon before 2025. To enable this mission it is envisioned to procure the full implementation of the mission as a commercial service, including mission integration, lunar communication, transportation and operations services.

In a consortium led by Space Applications Services, TUM supports the payload development with the selection of instrumentation for the feedstock characterisation and general expertise regarding ISRU processes and thermal engineering.

Consortium

  • Space Applications Services
  • Technische Universität München
  • ...
To top

Lehrstuhl für Astrodynamik

Prof. Dr. Marcello Romano

New site address: 
Willy-Messerschmitt-Str. 11,
82024 Taufkirchen, 
Germany

Old site address: 
Boltzmannstr. 15, 
85748 Garching, 
Germany

marcello.romano(at)tum.de

  • Datenschutz
  • Impressum
  • Barrierefreiheit