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New LUNA facility will prepare astronauts for moon landings

September 25, 2024

The moon may be 384,400 kilometers away, but an accurate replica of its surface has opened in Germany. Astronauts from around the world will use it to train for missions to the moon.

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ESA Luna Cologne Germany Moon Hall
A new facility mimicking the surface of the moon has opened in Cologne, Germany. The LUNA facility will help astronauts train for future lunar landingsImage: ESA

A new mock-up of the moon's surface has opened near the western German city of Cologne.

A decade in the making, the LUNA Analog Facility is jointly built by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the German Aerospace Center (DLR).

"The LUNA facility symbolizes the conditions on the lunar surface and prepares astronauts for the moon," Josef Aschbacher, ESA director general, said at a press briefing event.

That includes non-European astronauts, including those from the American space agency NASA.

The LUNA facility is a "regolith testbed" made from synthetic materials designed to simulate the moon's surface.

LUNA was first conceptualized in 2013, but the original proposal for a 1,000-square-meter (10,764-square-foot) facility was trimmed to a 700-square-meter final design. 

LUNA facility mimics moon's surface

"We have about 900 tonnes of regolith simulating material in the facility to simulate the dusty environment and mobility on the surface," said Juergen Schlutz, LUNA Facility Engineer & Moon Strategy Lead at European Space Agency, at the same press briefing.

The simulated moon dust, called EAC-1, was sourced from 45-million-year-old volcanic powder cast across the Eifel region covering the Belgian, German and Luxembourg borderlands.

The main hall also includes a specialized illumination simulator to recreate day-and-night cycles on the moon's surface.

The ESA is also working with European partners to introduce gravity offloading systems. "They will allow testing of the ability to move in one-sixth gravity conditions, like astronauts would have to on the moon," said Schlutz.

As well as providing a realistic surface for astronauts to prepare for moon visits, it will also provide a testbed for operating robotic systems, scientific activities and energy systems.

For example, researchers at the facility will test the regolith to understand the effects of moon dust on equipment space agencies plan to bring to the moon.

Research at the facility aims to generate solutions that "make life on earth much more productive and cleaner," said Aschbacher.

Mondoberfläche 1971 | Astronaut James Irwin salutiert neben US-Flagge auf dem Mond
Astronauts haven't been to the moon's surface since December 1972. Space programs like Artemis aim to bring humans back to the moon by 2028Image: The Print Collector/picture alliance

Preparing for Artemis missions to moon

The LUNA facility won't be the only moon-like facility available for astronauts and scientists to use.

Under construction next door is the Future Lunar Exploration Habitat (FLEXHab), simulating a potential moon habitation module and connecting into the main hall.

The EDEN-ISS greenhouse, a five-year experiment simulating food cultivation in cold space environments, will be repurposed as the "EDEN LUNA" project.

It will be used for astronauts-in-training to practice growing their own food — a vital skill should NASA's goal of establishing a permanent moon research presence be realized in the coming years.

NASA's Artemis program is poised to return to the moon by the end of the decade with a new generation of explorers.

Artemis I launched in 2022 as an uncrewed test flight. The second and third missions will launch crewed missions first to lunar orbit and then the moon's surface.

Edited by: Fred Schwaller

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DW Journalist Matthew Ward Agius
Matthew Ward Agius Journalist with a background reporting on history, science, health, climate and environment.