Rachel Kraft
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1100
rachel.h.kraft@nasa.gov
Katherine K. Martin
Glenn Research Center, Cleveland
216-433-2406
katherine.martin@grc.nasa.gov
WASHINGTON -- NASA is announcing
opportunities for academia, industry and government agencies to develop and
carry out research and technology demonstrations on the International Space
Station using the newly installed Space Communications and Navigation (SCAN)
testbed.
There are two announcements of
opportunity. The SCAN Testbed Experiment Opportunity invites industry and other
government agencies to enter into Space Act Agreements with NASA to use the
space station's SCAN platform. The SCAN Testbed Cooperative Agreement Notice
invites academia to develop proposals to use the orbiting laboratory's SCAN
testbed research capabilities. NASA expects the first demonstrations by late
2013 or early 2014.
These opportunities will allow
researchers to develop new software according to the Space Telecommunications
Radio Standard (STRS) architecture for radios and reconfigure how radios
communicate in space.
Experiments will provide waveforms and
software components to the STRS waveform repository and enable future hardware
platforms to use common reusable software modules. These new capabilities could
enable greater scientific return from future NASA missions.
The SCAN testbed is a communications,
navigation and networking demonstration platform based on the STRS. The
experimental platform began its initial checkout activities on the space
station Aug. 13 and will operate for as long as three years.
NASA's Glenn Research Center in
Cleveland leads the SCAN testbed multi-center team, which includes the agency's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.; Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, Calif.; and Johnson Space Center in Houston. General Dynamics of
Scottsdale, Ariz., and Harris Corp. of Melbourne, Fla., developed
software-defined radios under cooperative agreements with NASA. The testbed is
managed by the SCAN Program Office within the Human Exploration and Operations
Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
For the SCAN Testbed Cooperative
Agreement Notice and Experiment Opportunity, visit http://go.nasa.gov/QLp37U.
For more information about the SCAN
testbed, visit http://go.nasa.gov/QdpciB.
For more information about the
International Space Station research and technology, visit http://www.nasa.gov/station.
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