Monday, September 15, 2008

NASA USES COMMERCIAL MICROGRAVITY FLIGHT SERVICES FOR FIRST TIME

NASA for the first time last week used microgravity research flights aboard commercially-owned aircraft to test hardware and technologies. These flights, on an airplane operated by the Zero Gravity Corporation, simulated the weightless conditions of space.

In addition to numerous NASA experiments, five companies sponsored by the agency's Innovative Partnerships Program flew experiments aboard the reduced-gravity aircraft flights from Ellington Field in Houston. The flights were the first in NASA's Facilitated Access to the Space Environment for Technology Development and Training program, called FAST.

The companies, which are participating in the Small Business Innovation Research program, tested five new technologies Sept. 9-10:

- Pneumatic mining under lunar gravity conditions (Honeybee Robotics of New York)
- Aircraft sensor-logger operations (Metis Design Corporation of Cambridge, Mass.)
- Microgravity flight testing of self-deploying shells (Mevicon Inc. of Sunnyvale, Calif.)
- Virtual sensor test instrumentation operations (Mobitrum Corporation of Silver Spring, Md.)
- Nanofluid coolant testing (nanoComposix, Inc. of San Diego, Calif.)

Representatives of the companies were aboard the aircraft to operate and evaluate their technologies during the flights, which created zero-gravity and lunar-gravity conditions. The technologies will improve air and space vehicle capabilities and support the design of systems for the exploration of the moon and operations there.

NASA's contract with the Zero Gravity Corporation of Las Vegas, which is managed by NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, is part of an effort to expand the agency's use of commercial services. The flights were conducted from Ellington Field with the nearby Johnson Space Center in Houston providing technical support to the participating experimenters

Weightless conditions are achieved by flying an airplane on a parabolic trajectory. A typical flight lasting two hours consists of 50 parabolas, generating up to 25 seconds of microgravity during each parabola.

Four days of flights originally were scheduled in September, but the approach of Hurricane Ike caused those scheduled Sept. 11-12 to be suspended. An effort will be made to reschedule the flights in the future. NASA's first flights with the Zero Gravity Corporation occurred the week of Aug. 25. More flights are planned in October, November and January.

A call for new proposals for FAST program flights in 2009 will be issued later this month. It will be open to any companies or organizations working on technologies of value to NASA.

For more information about FAST, visit:

http://www.ipp.nasa.gov/ii_fast.htm

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov


0 comments to "NASA USES COMMERCIAL MICROGRAVITY FLIGHT SERVICES FOR FIRST TIME"

RSS Feeds

 

Send me hate/love letters

(Click This Gift Box To Get Your Site/Blog Listed Here)

Horror Of The Day

Magic Show

Magic Show

Stylish Walk

My Friend's Blogroll

Non-Believers Giving Aid

The Out Campaign

The Out Campaign: Scarlet Letter of Atheism

Blog Archive

Dancing Tweety

Dancing Tweety

NASA International Space Station

NASA International Space Station

NASA Solar System

NASA Solar System

NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA Voyager 2 Launch

NASA Voyager 2 Launch

NASA Flight Over Venus

NASA Flight Over Venus

NASA's Sombrero Galaxy in Infrared

NASA's Sombrero Galaxy in Infrared

NASA Hubble Telescope

NASA  Hubble Telescope

NASA Mars Exploration Rover

NASA Mars Exploration Rover

NASA Shooting For The Moon

NASA Shooting For The Moon

NASA STS-132 Lifts Off

NASA STS-132 Lifts Off

NASA Expedition 21 Lifts Off

NASA Expedition 21 Lifts Off

NASA The Birth Of Stars

NASA The Birth Of Stars

NASA Ring Of Fire

NASA Ring Of Fire

NASA Expedition 22 Crew Lands

NASA Expedition 22 Crew Lands

NASA Huygens on Titan

NASA Huygens on Titan

NASA Expedition 23 Soyuz Rollout

NASA Expedition 23 Soyuz Rollout

NASA Launch Pad 39A

NASA Launch Pad 39A

NASA Mission to Jupiter

NASA Mission to Jupiter

NASA WISE

NASA WISE

NASA Glint in the Cat's Eye

NASA Glint in the Cat's Eye

NASA Saturn's Auroras

NASA Saturn's Auroras

NASA Phoenix Twilight

NASA Phoenix Twilight

NASA Phoenix

NASA Phoenix

NASA Cosmic Pearls

NASA Cosmic Pearls

NASA Gemini 5 Launch

NASA Gemini 5 Launch

NASA Mercury Space Capsule

NASA Mercury Space Capsule

NASA Cassini Spacecraft

NASA Cassini Spacecraft

NASA Space Shuttle

NASA Space Shuttle

NASA Europa Explorer

NASA Europa Explorer

NASA The First Docking in Space

NASA The First Docking in Space