HomeBusinessHow to avoid a...

How to avoid a puncture on the Moon

Padraig Belton

Technology Reporter

Getty Images A lunar rover from the 1972 Apollo mission on the moon.
Getty Images

The Apollo mission lunar rovers were lightweight vehicles

Going back to the Moon after half a century, and then to Mars, literally means reinventing the wheel.

After all, Mars is a long way to come back if you get a flat.

“One thing you cannot have is a puncture,” says Florent Menegaux, chief executive of the French tyre-maker Michelin.

The tough conditions on Mars have been underlined by the experience of the unmanned Curiosity rover.

Just a year after landing in 2012, its six rigid aluminium tyres were visibly ripped through with punctures and tears.

As for the Moon, the US Artemis missions aim to return astronauts there, perhaps by 2027.

Later Artemis missions plan to use a lunar rover to explore the Moon’s south pole starting with Artemis V, currently scheduled for 2030.

The Artemis astronauts will be driving much further than their Apollo forebears, who in six landings between 1969 and 1972 never ventured more than 25 miles (40km) across the Moon’s surface.

“The target is to cover 10,000 kilometres in 10 years,” says Sylvain Barthet, who runs Michelin’s lunar airless wheel programme in the central French town of Clermont Ferrand.

“We’re not talking about short, week-long durations, we’re talking about decades of utilisation,” says Dr Santo Padula, who has a PhD in materials science, and works for Nasa as an engineer at the John Glenn Research Centre in Cleveland, Ohio.

NASA Curiosity rover on MarsNASA

The rocky surface on Mars has damaged Curiosity’s tyres

One big challenge for anyone developing technology for the Moon are the huge temperature ranges.

At the lunar poles temperatures can plunge lower than -230C, that’s not far off absolute zero, where atoms stop moving.

And that’s a problem for tyres.

“Without atom motion you have a hard time having the material be able to deform and return,” says Dr Padula.

The tyres need to be able to deform as they go over rocks and then ping back to their original shape.

“If we permanently deform a tyre, it doesn’t roll efficiently, and we have issues with power loss,” says Dr Padula.

The new wheels will also carry much bigger loads than the lightweight rovers Apollo astronauts cruised around in.

The next space missions will need to drive round “bigger science platforms and mobile habitats that get larger and larger”, he says.

And that will be an even heftier problem on Mars, where gravity is double that on the Moon.

Padraig Belton Michelin's bright blue plastic wheel - curved spokes support a wide solid rim.Padraig Belton

Michelin uses high-performance plastics for its Moon tyres

Apollo’s lunar rovers used tyres made from zinc-coated piano wire in a woven mesh, with a range of around 21 miles.

Since extreme temperatures and cosmic rays break down rubber or turn it to a brittle glass, metal alloys and high-performance plastic are chief contenders for airless space tyres.

“In general, metallic or carbon fibre-based materials are used for these wheels,” says Pietro Baglion, team leader of the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Rosalind Franklin Mission, which aims to send its own rover to Mars by 2028.

One promising material is nitinol, an alloy of nickel and titanium.

“Fuse these and it makes a rubber-acting metal that can bend all these different ways, and it will always stretch back to its original shape, says Earl Patrick Cole, chief executive of The Smart Tire Company.

He calls nitinol’s flexible properties “one of the craziest things you will ever see”.

Nitinol is a potentially “revolutionary” material says Dr Padula, because the alloy also absorbs and releases energy as it changes states. It may even have solutions to heating and refrigeration, he says.

However, Mr Barthet at Michelin thinks that a material closer to a high-performance plastic will be more suitable for tyres that need to cover long distances on the Moon.

Bridgestone A Bridgestone tyre, with felt-like pads on its rim.Bridgestone

The pads on the Bridgestone tyre mimic camel hooves

Bridgestone has meanwhile taken a bio-mimicry approach, by making a model of the footpads of camels.

Camels have soft, fatty footpads that disperse their weight on to a wider surface area, keeping their feet from sinking into loose sandy soil.

Inspired by that, Bridgestone is using a felt-like material for its tread, while the wheel comprises thin metal spokes that can flex.

The flexing divides the lunar module’s weight into a larger contact area, so it can drive without getting stuck in the fragments of rock and dust on the Moon’s surface.

Michelin and Bridgestone are each part of different consortiums that, along with California’s Venturi Astrolab, are presenting their proposed tyre tech to Nasa at the John Glenn Centre this month (May).

Nasa is expected to make a decision later this year – it might choose one proposal or adopt elements of several of them.

Meanwhile, Michelin is testing its tyres by driving a sample rover around on a volcano near Clermont, whose powdery terrain resembles the Moon’s surface.

Bridgestone is doing the same on western Japan’s Tottori Sand Dunes.

ESA is also exploring the possibility of whether Europe might make a rover on its own for other missions, says Mr Barthet.

The work might have some useful applications here on Earth.

While working on his doctorate at the University of Southern California, Dr Cole joined a Nasa entrepreneurial programme to work on commercialising some of the technology from the Mars super-elastic rover tyre.

An early product this year will be nickel-titanium bicycle tyres.

Priced around $150 (£120) each, the tyres are much more expensive than regular ones, but would be extremely durable.

He also plans to work this year on durable tyres for motorbikes, aimed at areas with rough roads.

For all this, his “dream” remains to play a part in humanity’s return to the Moon.

“So, I can tell my kids, look up there on the Moon,” he says. “Daddy’s tyres are up there.”

More Technology of Business

Source link

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Most Popular

More from Author

Majority of investors planning to boost portfolios in 2026, survey finds

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to...

Gold and silver prices broke all previous records

Gold, silver, and platinum hit record highs on Friday, as...

Challenge: Only a person with 20/20 vision can spot the summer drink within 12 seconds |

Amidst the twinkling lights and cozy stalls of a delightful...

2025 likely to be UK’s hottest year on record, says Met Office

Mark PoyntingClimate researcherEPARising temperatures in the UK will become "the new...

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Read Now

Majority of investors planning to boost portfolios in 2026, survey finds

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines...

Gold and silver prices broke all previous records

Gold, silver, and platinum hit record highs on Friday, as speculative momentum and thinning year-end liquidity powered the precious metals, along with markets pricing in more US rate cuts, and rising geopolitical tension. ...

Challenge: Only a person with 20/20 vision can spot the summer drink within 12 seconds |

Amidst the twinkling lights and cozy stalls of a delightful Christmas market, a refreshing summer surprise lies in wait, daring onlookers to uncover it in just 12 seconds. This visual trickery invites you to sharpen your perception, as your mind is led to expect only seasonal...

2025 likely to be UK’s hottest year on record, says Met Office

Mark PoyntingClimate researcherEPARising temperatures in the UK will become "the new normal", a leading government climate adviser has warned, as she called for more to be done to prepare for the impacts of climate change.It comes as the Met Office revealed 2025 was on course to be...

Perry Bamonte, guitarist for The Cure, dies after “short illness” at 65

Perry Archangelo Bamonte, longtime guitarist and keyboardist for the influential goth band The Cure, has died. He was 65.The band announced his death on their official website on Friday."It is with enormous sadness that we confirm the death of our great friend and bandmate...

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: FCX, CPNG, TGT

Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday: Freeport-McMoRan — The miner rose 3.1% as gold and other metals scaled to record levels. Target — The retailer rose more than 1% after the Financial Times reported, citing sources, that hedge fund Toms Capital Investment Management made...

Global Capital Is Doubling Down On NCR’s Commercial Assets; What’s Fuelling The Rush? | Real Estate News

Last Updated:December 27, 2025, 15:42 ISTNet office absorption in NCR jumped 61% year-on-year in 2024, the sharpest increase among major cities, to touch 9.5 million sq. ft.Of the $8.87 billion in real estate investments that entered India in 2024, global investors accounted for nearly two-thirds.Delhi-NCR has entered...

Apple fixes zero-day vulnerabilities in emergency security update

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Apple has released emergency security updates to fix two zero-day vulnerabilities that attackers actively exploited in highly targeted attacks. The company described the activity as an "extremely sophisticated attack" aimed at specific individuals. Although Apple did not identify...

Prince Harry, Meghan lose key team member responsible for royal truce

Prince Harry and Meghan have lost an important member of their team, who played an instrumental role in cracking...

AAA says a gallon hits 4-year low as holiday travel starts

Customers at the GasWay Xpress Mart at 1120 Erie Blvd. pump gas on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025, in Schenectady, N.Y. Lori Van Buren | Albany Times Union | Hearst Newspapers | Getty ImagesHoliday road-trippers are feeling some relief at the pump this year.The average price of unleaded...

Uttar Pradesh: Electric Bus Service Launched In Prayagraj Connecting THESE 4 Cities | Mobility News

Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh: Taking a major step towards strengthening a clean and green public transport ecosystem, six electric buses were flagged off from the Leader Road Depot office in Prayagraj to Varanasi, Ayodhya, Kanpur and Lucknow. These new electric buses will offer passengers a safe, comfortable, and...