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Sunday, July 21, 2013

NASA funds suspended animation and other far-out space tech ideas


Image: Stasis Habitat
Spaceworks Engineering via NASA
 
An artist's conception shows a Stasis Habitat where astronauts could be held in suspended animation, as part of a spaceship complex that also includes an Earth Return Vehicle and a Mars Excursion Vehicle.
NASA has granted funding to a dozen imaginative tech concepts, in the hopes that one or more of them will lead to big breakthroughs in space science and exploration.
The 12 ideas, which were selected under Phase 1 of the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts program, or NIAC, are ambitious and varied. One aims to build biomaterials such as human tissue with a 3D printer. Another proposes to induce deep-sleep torpor states in astronauts making the long journey to Mars.
"These new Phase 1 selections include potential breakthroughs for Earth and space science, diverse operations and the potential for new paths that expand human civilization and commerce into space," NIAC program executive Jay Falker said in a statement. [Future Visions of Human Spaceflight]
Phase 1 awards are worth about $100,000. The selected mission teams will use the money to conduct nine-month initial analysis studies, after which they can apply for Phase 2 funding of approximately $500,000 for two more years of concept development.
The 12 selected concepts and their principal investigators are:
  • Pulsed Fission-Fusion (PuFF) Propulsion System (Rob Adams, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center)
  • Torpor-Inducing Transfer Habitat For Human Stasis To Mars (John Bradford, Spaceworks Engineering, Inc.)
  • Two-Dimensional Planetary Surface Landers (Hamid Hemmati, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory)
  • Dual-mode Propulsion System Enabling CubeSat Exploration of the Solar System (Nathan Jerred, Universities Space Research Association)
  • Growth Adapted Tensegrity Structures: A New Calculus for the Space Economy (Anthony Longman)
  • Eternal Flight as the Solution for 'X' (Mark Moore, NASA Langley Research Center)
  • Deep Mapping of Small Solar System Bodies with Galactic Cosmic Ray Secondary Particle Showers (Thomas Prettyman, Planetary Science Institute)
  • Biomaterials Out of Thin Air: In Situ, On-Demand Printing of Advanced Biocomposites (Lynn Rothschild, NASA Ames Research Center)
  • Plasmonic Force Propulsion Revolutionizes Nano/PicoSatellite Capability (Joshua Rovey, University of Missouri, Rolla)
  • Transformers for Extreme Environments (Adrian Stoica, Jet Propulsion Laboratory)
  • 10-Meter Sub-Orbital Large Balloon Reflector (Christopher Walker, University of Arizona)
  • Low-Mass Planar Photonic Imaging Sensor (Ben Yoo, University of California, Davis)
The NIAC program has been operating in its present form since 2011. The original NIAC, called the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts, ran from 1998 through 2007. (In 2008, Congress ordered the U.S. National Research Council to investigate NIAC's effectiveness and importance. The reviews were favorable, leading to the program's resurrection several years later.)

Mike Wall

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