FRANK Autonomous’ cover photo
FRANK Autonomous

FRANK Autonomous

Space Research and Technology

The autonomy layer for the planetary economy. Intelligence that doesn't wait for Earth.

About us

FRANK Autonomous gathers ground truth survey data of the lunar surface. The space economy needs high-resolution terrain and subsurface resource maps, but today that data only comes from orbit and can't deliver verified ground truth. We put autonomous rovers on the surface to map and prospect directly. The 2.6-second comms delay makes real-time control from Earth impossible, so our rovers run brain-inspired AI onboard and survey on their own. The data is the product, and the autonomy is what makes it possible. We're starting on the Moon, with the same approach built to scale to Mars and the asteroid belt.

Website
https://frankautonomous.com/
Industry
Space Research and Technology
Company size
2-10 employees
Type
Privately Held

Employees at FRANK Autonomous

Updates

  • One thread kept resurfacing at the MoonTech panel last Wednesday: the lunar economy is being designed around data that doesn't exist yet. Orbital imagery and terrain geometry are the easy part. What's missing is ground truth from the surface itself, the geotechnical measurements you can only collect by putting a robot on the regolith and having it dig, drill, and sample. NASA's VIPER program made the point plainly: more surface data is needed, and the only way to get it right now is to send robots to measure it. That's the data FRANK's rovers are built to produce. Thanks to Matt Rappaport and BGA for the panel.

    Tonight at Berkeley Gateway Accelerator, we packed the house for MoonTech: The New Space Economy. 400 people registered. The room is full. And the conversation is inspiring! Our panelists bring the full stack of the lunar economy into one room: Terry Fong (NASA Ames Chief Roboticist, Deputy Rover Lead on VIPER) on what autonomous systems actually need to do on the lunar surface. Alex Greenberg (Co-Founder, Loft Orbital) on why orbit-as-infrastructure is already here, and what that model means for the Moon. Patrick Beatty (Managing Director, Beyond Earth Ventures) on where the venture capital is going, and where the real gaps are. Emerson Garnett (Principal, Balerion Space Ventures) on defense, critical materials, and the companies building the industrial base beneath it all. Moderated brilliantly by Izen Thornton, Founder of FRANK Autonomous. We also heard a sharp lightning talk from Raphael Attié, PhD of HelioArc and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on space weather hazards to lunar surface assets. A reminder that the Moon's environment is not forgiving, and preparation is part of the business model. The thesis driving all of it: launch costs have collapsed, LEO is crowded, and the Moon is the next surface where private companies will operate at scale. NASA's CLPS program is pulling commercial providers onto the lunar surface whether the ecosystem is ready or not. The question isn't if. It's who, how fast, and where the gaps are. Grateful to everyone who is here. This is one of BGA's best panels yet! More to come. #DeepTech #SpaceTech #LunarEconomy #NewSpace #BerkeleyGatewayAccelerator

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