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In this episode of Crazy Wisdom, host Stewart Alsop talks with Rob Meyerson, co-founder and CEO of Interlune and former president of Blue Origin, about building the next phase of the space economy—from mining Helium-3 on the Moon to powering quantum computing and future fusion reactors on Earth. They explore the science behind lunar regolith, cryogenic separation, robotic excavation, and how private industry is rekindling the optimism of Apollo. Rob also shares lessons from scaling Blue Origin and explains why knowledge management and intuition matter when engineering at the edge of possibility. Follow Rob and Interlune on LinkedIn, X (Twitter), and Instagram.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:00 Stewart Alsop welcomes Rob Meyerson, who introduces Interlune’s mission to extract Helium-3 from the Moon and explains its origins in the Apollo samples.
05:00 Meyerson describes how lunar regolith traps solar wind gases, the role of ilmenite, and how spectrometry helps identify promising Helium-3 sites.
10:00 Discussion shifts to Helium-3’s commercial potential, the Department of Energy’s isotope program, and its link to tritium decay and nuclear stockpiles.
15:00 Meyerson connects Helium-3 to quantum computing, explaining cryogenic dilution refrigeration and the importance of ultra-cold temperatures.
20:00 They explore cryogenic engineering, partnerships with Vermeer for lunar excavation, and developing solar wind–implanted regolith simulants.
25:00 Rob reflects on his 15 years at Blue Origin, scaling from 10 to 1,500 people, and the importance of documentation and knowledge retention.
30:00 The talk turns to lunar water, propellant production, and how solar and nuclear power could support a permanent in-space economy.
35:00 Meyerson outlines robotic harvesting, lunar night hibernation, and AI applications for navigation, autonomy, and resource mapping.
40:00 The conversation broadens to intuition in engineering, testing in lunar gravity, and lessons from Apollo’s lost momentum and industrial base.
50:00 Rob closes with optimism for private industry’s role in rebuilding lunar infrastructure and how Interlune fits into humanity’s return to the Moon.
Key Insights
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6969 ratings
In this episode of Crazy Wisdom, host Stewart Alsop talks with Rob Meyerson, co-founder and CEO of Interlune and former president of Blue Origin, about building the next phase of the space economy—from mining Helium-3 on the Moon to powering quantum computing and future fusion reactors on Earth. They explore the science behind lunar regolith, cryogenic separation, robotic excavation, and how private industry is rekindling the optimism of Apollo. Rob also shares lessons from scaling Blue Origin and explains why knowledge management and intuition matter when engineering at the edge of possibility. Follow Rob and Interlune on LinkedIn, X (Twitter), and Instagram.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:00 Stewart Alsop welcomes Rob Meyerson, who introduces Interlune’s mission to extract Helium-3 from the Moon and explains its origins in the Apollo samples.
05:00 Meyerson describes how lunar regolith traps solar wind gases, the role of ilmenite, and how spectrometry helps identify promising Helium-3 sites.
10:00 Discussion shifts to Helium-3’s commercial potential, the Department of Energy’s isotope program, and its link to tritium decay and nuclear stockpiles.
15:00 Meyerson connects Helium-3 to quantum computing, explaining cryogenic dilution refrigeration and the importance of ultra-cold temperatures.
20:00 They explore cryogenic engineering, partnerships with Vermeer for lunar excavation, and developing solar wind–implanted regolith simulants.
25:00 Rob reflects on his 15 years at Blue Origin, scaling from 10 to 1,500 people, and the importance of documentation and knowledge retention.
30:00 The talk turns to lunar water, propellant production, and how solar and nuclear power could support a permanent in-space economy.
35:00 Meyerson outlines robotic harvesting, lunar night hibernation, and AI applications for navigation, autonomy, and resource mapping.
40:00 The conversation broadens to intuition in engineering, testing in lunar gravity, and lessons from Apollo’s lost momentum and industrial base.
50:00 Rob closes with optimism for private industry’s role in rebuilding lunar infrastructure and how Interlune fits into humanity’s return to the Moon.
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