Japan eyeing to Moonwalking humanoids by 2015

A group in Japan is vowing to send humanoid robots there by 2015. Call it a giant leap for druidkind.

The Space Oriented Higashiosaka Leading Association (SOHLA), a satellite-manufacturing consortium in the Osaka area, has vowed to put bipedal humanoid bots on the moon in the next five years.

The robot will be smaller than a person and, if it makes it onto the moon, may do things like record astronomical observations and take geological surveys and maybe do a bit of robot moonwalking.

Development costs for Maido-kun are estimated at $10.6 million, but the idea is being floated in part as an economic stimulus project for small and midsize tech firms in the Osaka region.

SOHLA has already worked with Japan’s New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). In 2009, it launched the Maido 1 weather observation microsatellite aboard a JAXA HII-A rocket. SOHLA wants its robot to hitch a ride on a JAXA rocket bound for the moon in five years.





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