by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
SpaceIL reaches deal with California-based SpaceX for a rocket launch, putting it at front of pack of 16 rival teams and on target for blast-off in late 2017 • "The magnitude of this achievement cannot be overstated," says XPRIZE President Bob Weiss.
| 
                                             A model of an Israeli 
spacecraft is displayed at a meeting between President Reuven Rivlin and
 Israeli space team, SpaceIL, in Jerusalem, Wednesday                   
                             
                                                 
|Photo credit: Reuters  | 
An Israeli team competing in a race to the 
moon sponsored by Google has signed a deal with California-based SpaceX 
for a rocket launch, putting it at the front of the pack and on target 
for blast-off in late 2017, officials said on Wednesday.
With the deadline to win a $20 million 
first-place prize just two years off, pressure is mounting on the 16 
rivals from around the world hoping to complete a privately funded moon 
landing.
Silicon Valley's Moon Express announced a week
 ago that it had signed a contract with Lockheed Martin-backed Rocket 
Lab. But Israel's SpaceIL is the first team to have a launch agreement 
reviewed, verified and accepted by XPRIZE, the group overseeing the 
contest.
"The magnitude of this achievement cannot be 
overstated," said XPRIZE President Bob Weiss. "This is the official 
milestone that the race is on. ... They've lit the fuse, as it were, for
 their competitive effort."
The key hurdle was finding an affordable ride to outer space without government funding, said Eran Privman, CEO of SpaceIL.
Because his team's spacecraft is much smaller 
than most competitors -- it looks like a robotic, four-legged table, 
about 1.5 meters (4 feet 11 inches) tall and wide -- the SpaceX Falcon 9
 launcher can carry 20 small satellites whose fares will help cover 
costs, Privman said.
"Other teams are trying to find such solutions," he said.
SpaceX is a private company owned and operated by technology entrepreneur Elon Musk.
Much work remains. SpaceIL must manufacture 
hardware to fit the rocket and only then can it be shipped to the United
 States, Privman said.
The mission is scheduled for late 2017, just 
before the contest deadline. Once exiting the rocket in space, the 
Israeli craft will make its journey to the moon.
To win, a privately funded team must place an unmanned 
spacecraft on the moon's surface that can explore 500 meters and 
transmit high-definition video and images back to earth.
      Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=28739
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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