NASA's Lunabotics Competition


NASA's Lunabotics Competition, previously known as NASA's Robotics Mining Competition, is a competition established in 2010 for university students to build a mining robot that is designed to navigate on the Moon. The change of the competition name "reflects the future evolution of the competition beyond a mining competition" as NASA follows the President’s Space Policy Directive - 1 to prioritize establishing a forward operation base on the south pole of the Moon as a first step to "human expansions across the solar system."
One team per school is allowed to compete and around 50 schools compete each year. The teams should compose of at least 2 undergraduate students and graduate students who are enrolled in the current school year. The teams also need to include a current faculty member or advisor. There is no limit to the number of members but NASA advises the teams to have a sufficient and manageable size. While the competition is focused on graduate and undergraduate students from four year institutions, invitations are also extended to teams from community colleges. The latest competition, in May 2019, cancelled all on-site activities and teams competed virtually with their written reports and presentations. University of Alabama's team, Alabama Astrobotics, won for the fifth consecutive year by winning the Grand Prize of The Joe Kosmo Award for Excellence.

RMC 2019 Changes

RMC 2019 was scheduled to take place between May 6th and 10th, 2019 at the Astronaut Memorial Foundation’s Center for Space Education Building in Kennedy Space Center. This year, the competition planned to move the competition arena indoors to avoid delays due to frequent thunderstorms as well as transitioning the mission objective from mining on Mars to mining on the moon. However, due to events such as the 2018–19 United States federal government shutdown and subsequent budget delays, the 2019 competition cancelled all on-site competition and activities. The teams are instead only scored on four categories: Plans for Systems Engineering, Systems Engineering Paper, Outreach Project Report, and a Virtual Slide Presentation and Demonstration. The plan and the presentation are optional for participating teams but all four must be submitted to qualify for the Grand Prize. In place of the usual on-site mining at NASA, University of Alabama hosted a Robotic Mining Challenge at the Tuscaloosa campus during the same time period as the originally planned NASA RMC.

RMC Award categories

The NASA Robotics Mining Competition website provides the following descriptions of the award categories: