David E. Steitz
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1730
david.steitz@nasa.gov
Amy Johnson
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va.
757-864-7022
amy.johnson@nasa.gov
WASHINGTON -- NASA'S Space Technology
Program has selected 14 technologies for development and demonstration on
commercial reusable suborbital launch vehicles.
The selected proposals offer innovative
cutting-edge ideas and approaches for technology in areas including active
thermal management, advanced avionics, pinpoint landing and advanced in-space
propulsion. They also address many of the high-priority technology needs
identified in the recent National Research Council's Space Technology Roadmaps
and Priorities report. These payloads will help NASA advance technology
development needed to enable NASA's current and future missions in exploration,
science and space operations.
"These technology payloads will
have the opportunity to be tested on commercial suborbital flights, sponsored
by NASA, that fly up to and near the boundary of space," said Michael
Gazarik, Director of NASA's Space Technology Program at NASA Headquarters in
Washington. "The flights will ensure the technology fidelity before
they're put to work in operational systems in the harsh environment of
space."
Proposals for this solicitation were
received from NASA centers and other government agencies, federally funded
research and development centers, educational institutions, industry, and
non-profit organizations. NASA's Flight Opportunities Program sponsored this
solicitation in collaboration with NASA's Game Changing Development Program.
Following their development, selected
technologies will be made available to the Flight Opportunities Program for
pairing with appropriate suborbital reusable launch service provider flights.
The Flight Opportunities Program provides opportunities for technologies to be
demonstrated in relevant environments, while fostering the development of
commercial reusable transportation to near space.
Awards will range from $125,000 to
$500,000 with a total NASA investment of approximately $3.5 million. Payloads
are expected to fly in 2013 and 2014. Proposals selected for contract
negotiations are:
-- "Demonstration of Vertically
Aligned Carbon Nano-tubes for Earth Climate Remote Sensing," Howard Todd
Smith, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
-- "Facility for Microgravity
Research and Submicroradian Stabilization using sRLVs," Scott Green,
Controlled Dynamics, Inc., Huntington Beach, Calif.
-- "Enhanced Thermal Switch,"
Douglas Mehoke, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel,
Md.
-- "Autonomous Flight Manager for
Human-in-the-Loop Immersive Simulation and Flight Test of Terrestrial
Rockets," Kevin Duda, Draper Laboratory, Inc., Cambridge, Mass.
-- "Armadillo Launch Vehicle
Attitude Knowledge Capability Enhancement Using Advanced Micro Sun
Sensor," Sohrab Mobasser, Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena,
Calif.
-- "Demonstration of Variable
Radiator," Richard Kurwitz, Texas A&M University, College Station
-- "Dynamic Microscopy
System," John Vellinger, Techshot Inc., Greenville, Indiana
-- "Design and Development of a
Micro Satellite Attitude Control System," Manoranjan Majji, University at
Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y.
-- "Suborbital Test of a Robotics-Based
Method for In-Orbit Identification of Spacecraft Inertia Properties," Ou
Ma, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces
-- "Fuel Optimal Large Divert
Guidance for Planetary Pinpoint Landing," Behcet Acikmese, JPL
-- "SwRI Solar Instrument Pointing
Platform," Craig DeForest, Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio,
Texas
-- "Saturated Fluid Pistonless Pump
Technology Demonstrator," Ryan Starkey, University of Colorado, Boulder
-- "Electric-hydrodynamic Control
of Two-Phase Heat Transfer in Microgravity," Boris Khusid, New Jersey
Institute of Technology, University Heights, N.J.
-- "An FPGA-based, Radiation
Tolerant, Reconfigurable Computer System with Real Time Fault Detection,
Avoidance, and Repair," Brock LaMeres, Montana State University, Bozeman
For information about NASA's Flight
Opportunities Program, visit https://flightopportunities.nasa.gov/.
For information about Game Changing
Development, visit http://go.usa.gov/RPS.
For more information about NASA's Space
Technology Program, visit http://www.nasa.gov/oct.
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