Published:
X PRIZE Foundation and NASA Award $2 Million in Prizes to Masten Space Systems and Armadillo Aerospace

Today, the X PRIZE Foundation along with NASA hosted
an awards ceremony to culminate the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander X PRIZE Challenge
(NGLLXPC). Masten Space
Systems, led by David Masten, was awarded the top $1 million prize,
while Armadillo
Aerospace, led by id Software founder John Carmack, took home the
second place prize of $500,000. The NGLLXPC was a partnership with NASA
funding the $2 million in prize money as part of their Centennial
Challenges program while the X PRIZE Foundation managed the competition
which began in 2006. The $2 million prize purse is the largest
incentivized prize awarded by the X PRIZE Foundation since the 2004 Ansari X PRIZE
competition. The award ceremony took place in Washington D.C. at the
Rayburn House Office Building.

"You get what you incentivize," said Robert K. Weiss, President of the X
PRIZE Foundation. "The teams spent the equivalent of $20 million in pursuit
of $2 million in prize money. That kind of leverage is a powerful
component of this type of competition."
On Oct. 30 the Masten team successfully completed the requirements for the
Level 2 portion of the NGLLXPC, edging out the Armadillo Aerospace team who
also completed the criterion for Level 2 on Sept. 12. Masten Space Systems
launched their 'Xoie' vehicle and achieved an average landing accuracy of
19 cm to beat Armadillo Aerospace's previous accuracy mark of 87 cm.
"We founded the company in 2004, so Masten Space Systems existed before the
Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander X PRIZE Challenge. Therefore we were already
building our vehicles," said David Masten, CEO of Masten Space Systems.
"The lunar lander challenge incentivized our team along with the
marketplace, which has allowed us to move faster. Ultimately the prize has
made it easier for us to find investors and customers. Because of the X
PRIZE competition we are now able to move forward in our industry and go
higher than ever before."
The competition required the rocket to simulate a full lunar lander
mission. The flight profile had to closely simulate the task of descending
from lunar orbit to the lunar surface, refueling and returning to lunar
orbit. To match the performance of such a mission here on Earth, the
vehicle flew along a prescribed mission profile designed to show both
control and power, ascending to a height of 50 meters, translating
horizontally to a landing pad 50 meters away, landing safely on a rocky
lunar-replica surface after at least 180 seconds of flight time. The flight
profile was then flown again, with the rocket demonstrating repeatability
by returning to the original launch site.
The NGLLXPC was comprised of two levels; each level included both first and
second place prizes. The $350,000 first-place prize for Level 1 went to
Armadillo Aerospace at last year's competition. Masten Space Systems will
also take home the second-place prize of $150,000 in the Level 1 portion of
the challenge.
The ultimate goal of the NGLLXPC is to inspire entrepreneurs who can enable
a new era of commercial exploration. These milestone events within the
privately funded space sector continue to demonstrate the value of prizes
and how they stimulate innovation. The successful flights from all of the
private space companies continue to underscore the report to President
Obama by the Augustine Commission, which called for increased commercial
sector participation both in orbital operations and NASA's efforts to reach
the Moon by 2020. Now, more than ever, the time is right for private
industry to supply NASA with hardware and services to enable suborbital,
orbital, and lunar exploration.
The NGLLXPC was operated by the X PRIZE Foundation at no cost to NASA. This
was made possible by the generous support of Northrop Grumman Corporation,
which builders of the original Apollo Lunar Modules used to safely carry
crew down to the lunar surface in the 1960s and 1970s. Northrop Grumman
supported the competition throughout the four years in which it was
offered.
For more information about X PRIZE Foundation, please visit
www.xprize.org.


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