Audi's Mission to the Moon
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Audi's Mission to the Moon

First Le Mans, then the moon! Berlin-based engineering group Part Time Scientists have their hearts set on winning the Google Lunar X Prize and Audi has stepped in to help by designing a rover named Lunar Quattro.

The Google Lunar XPrize was introduced in 2007 by the Californian non-profit foundation XPrize, which runs technical and scientific contests to encourage technological development. Contestants are requested to land on the moon a rover capable of covering 500 metres and transmitting high definition photos and videos. The project must be funded privately.

No less than 34 teams entered, but despite the 20-million-dollar prize money only half are still in the running, among them Part Time Scientists, who have joined forces with Audi.
The German carmaker has designed a vehicle that makes use of its famous Quattro all-wheel-drive system, to be launched in 2017.

The contest is similar in aim to the equally challenging Michelin Total Performance Award which was introduced in 2014 and ran again in 2015. The award offered a million euros to the first competitor to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans, record the best race lap time, cover over 5,000 km with limited fuel consumption and use only nine sets of tyres – all in the same race. Audi very nearly managed to rise to the challenge in 2014. The carmaker’s latest mission has even loftier ambitions!

Cécile Bonardel / ACO – Translated from French by Emma Paulay

PHOTO: Audi’s “Lunar Quattro” robot

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