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Intuitive machines and texas A&M Space Institute Accelerate Lunar Mission Readiness

  • lbarber146
  • 5 hours ago
  • 4 min read

Updated: 2 minutes ago

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Testing the operational readiness of lunar terrain vehicles has been challenging because Earth-based environments like rocky desert beds or confined test areas filled with small amounts of synthetic regolith lack the scale and adaptability to truly replicate the Moon’s surface conditions. Rugged and highly variable terrain, shifting shadows, extreme light and dark, and low gravity are some of the factors that affect how vehicles move, grip, and wear, but these conditions are difficult to simulate with precision on Earth.


The new Texas A&M University Space Institute facility is designed to overcome those challenges. Funded by $200 million in state support championed by Texas State Representative Greg Bonnen, the facility is slated to open in the second half of 2026. And it is massive. Spanning 400,000 square feet, it features the world’s only indoor Lunar and Mars-scape, each covering 2.5 acres. For perspective, that’s nearly twice the size of the playing surface at Texas A&M’s Kyle Field.


The Space Institute facility works like a massive Etch-a-Sketch®, with the ability to shift hundreds of tons of synthetic regolith and dynamically reconfigure terrain so researchers can reshape the surface on demand and study how vehicles and equipment perform in 1/6th gravity environments. Advanced lighting systems mimic the surface dynamics of the Moon, including shadows, light, and darkness. Research garages support development of space suits, rovers, and medical technologies.


Pictured with Dr. Robert Ambrose, Associate Director of the Texas A&M Space Institute (second from left), are Brett Fischer (Infrastructure Program Management); Dr. Tim Crain (Chief Growth Officer); Trent Martin (VP, Lunar Access Services); and Jack “2fish” Fischer (SVP, Production & Operations), all of Intuitive Machines. 
Pictured with Dr. Robert Ambrose, Associate Director of the Texas A&M Space Institute (second from left), are Brett Fischer (Infrastructure Program Management); Dr. Tim Crain (Chief Growth Officer); Trent Martin (VP, Lunar Access Services); and Jack “2fish” Fischer (SVP, Production & Operations), all of Intuitive Machines. 

Building on this initiative, Intuitive Machines and Texas A&M have signed a lease agreement that will give Intuitive Machines a dedicated bay in the Space Institute facility, currently under construction near NASA's Johnson Space Center. The agreement marks a new phase in their partnership, focused on advancing lunar mission readiness and developing a skilled workforce to support the next generation of space exploration. The facility will also benefit from Intuitive Machines’ lunar surface data, which informs simulation and planning efforts and is the most extensive on Earth.


Dr. Robert Ambrose looks on as Tim Crain signs a lease agreement for a dedicated bay in the Space Institute facility for Intuitive Machines’ lunar terrain vehicle.
Dr. Robert Ambrose looks on as Tim Crain signs a lease agreement for a dedicated bay in the Space Institute facility for Intuitive Machines’ lunar terrain vehicle.

Intuitive Machines plans to use its leased bay to operate, test, and refine its Moon RACER (Reusable Autonomous Crewed Exploration Rover) lunar terrain vehicle. Developed for NASA’s Artemis campaign, Moon RACER is designed to support crewed surface mobility and cargo transport across challenging lunar terrain. The vehicle will be tested and refined within the institute’s simulated lunar environments, helping engineers optimize performance before deployment.


Tim Crain and Dr. Robert Ambrose get ready to take Intuitive Machines’ Moon RACER Lunar Terrain Vehicle for a spin at the Space Institute construction site.
Tim Crain and Dr. Robert Ambrose get ready to take Intuitive Machines’ Moon RACER Lunar Terrain Vehicle for a spin at the Space Institute construction site.

This work is further strengthened by Intuitive Machines’ work under contract for NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC).  The Intuitive Machines LROC team has spent the past 16 years building one of the most comprehensive visual and topographic datasets of the Moon, capturing more than 2.3 million high-resolution images, mapping over 98% of the lunar surface, and supporting Artemis and CLPS landing site selection. Their data has informed everything from Apollo site studies to terrain-relative navigation systems and student-led lunar research.

 

Today, the Intuitive Machines LROC and Optical Navigation and Data Transmission teams collaborate to enable precise terrain modeling, autonomous surface operations, and the next phase of commercial lunar infrastructure. This foundational data directly supports mission planning at the Texas A&M University Space Institute, helping researchers simulate lunar conditions with a high level of accuracy.


“Thanks to the vision and support of Senator Greg Bonnen, and the strong collaboration between Intuitive Machines and Texas A&M, this facility is becoming a reality, and there’s truly nothing like it anywhere in the world,” said Jack Fischer, Senior Vice President of Operations at Intuitive Machines and retired U.S. astronaut. “The Texas A&M University Space Institute is a proving ground for lunar operations, where we can simulate terrain, rehearse missions, and refine our vehicles before they ever leave Earth, which ultimately contributes to longer and more successful Moon missions. We’re establishing a center of excellence that enriches the greater Houston community and the global space industry.”

 

The institute is led by Dr. Nancy Currie-Gregg, former NASA astronaut and professor of practice in the Texas A&M College of Engineering, and Dr. Robert Ambrose, a leading expert in space robotics and mechanical engineering professor at Texas A&M. Their vision is to create a facility that supports mission concept development, applied research, and workforce training — building a pipeline of highly skilled workers who will power future lunar and Martian missions.

 

Ready to build your next mission?

From mapping the entire lunar surface to collaborating with innovative leaders like Texas A&M and discovering new ways to operate on the lunar surface and in deep space, Intuitive Machines is ready to help you accelerate your journey.  Contact us today.







 
 
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