| . | ![]() |
. |
|
by Nicole Quenelle AFRC News Edwards AFB CA (SPX) May 03, 2019
"We are now on the verge of giving students and teachers the ability to build and fly affordable experiments in space. When teachers are this excited about putting experiments in space, their students can't help but get excited about space, too." Elizabeth Kennick, president of Teachers in Space, does not take the opportunity to fly an experiment to space for granted. The nonprofit organization has worked with educators and engineers to design and test standard equipment for classroom-developed experiments, including 3D-printed frames, customizable processors, power adaptors and more. The equipment first flew on high-altitude balloons and more recently on a stratospheric glider. Now, thanks to support from NASA's Flight Opportunities program, the equipment will fly higher than ever before: to space on the next launch of Blue Origin's New Shepard rocket. Nine NASA-supported payloads successfully lifted off from Blue Origin's West Texas launch site May 2. "It's such a huge milestone," said Kennick. "This opens the door to flying more experiments for more schools, and that means exposing more teachers and students to the promise of spaceflight." That promise is bolstered by Flight Opportunities, which lets researchers test technologies in a relevant environment-particularly innovations that will help NASA return to the Moon and send crewed missions to Mars. The payloads will experience the rigors of a rocket launch and the challenges of a zero-gravity environment. These conditions will give researchers valuable insights into how their technologies would hold up on exploration missions. A 3D printing experiment from the University of Kentucky could further advance in space manufacturing-a critical capability for long-term stays on the lunar surface. While there are 3D printers on the International Space Station, the university's experiment, if successful, would provide the capability to manufacture metal components in space. Future explorers will need protection from potentially negative effects of deep space travel. With a new suborbital centrifuge from NanoRacks, researchers may be able to collect biological and physical data on suborbital rocket flights. A space-based centrifuge can simulate the gravity environment on the Moon or Mars. The capability could make it faster and cheaper to gather critical data. Missions to the Moon and the Red Planet will also require advanced fuel gauging systems- giving accurate measurements of the amount of propellant onboard vehicles operating in deep space without the need for complex procedures. A propellant gauging experiment from Purdue University aims to do just that.
The other Flight Opportunities-supported payloads aboard this launch are:
Evolved Medical Microgravity Suction Device
Suborbital Flight Experiment Monitor-2
Flow Boiling in Microgap Coolers
BioChip SubOrbitalLab
Strata-S1
About Flight Opportunities Blue Origin and other U.S. commercial spaceflight providers are contracted to provide flight services to NASA for flight testing and technology demonstration. Researchers from academia and industry with concepts for exploration, commercial space applications or other space utilization technologies of potential interest to NASA can receive grants from the Flight Opportunities program to purchase suborbital flights from these and other U.S. commercial spaceflight providers. For information about these opportunities, visit here
Spinoff Book Highlights NASA Technology Everywhere Pasadena CA (JPL) Apr 08, 2019 From precision GPS to batteries for one of the world's first commercial all-electric airplanes, NASA technology turns up in nearly every corner of modern life. The latest edition of NASA's Spinoff publication features dozens of commercial technologies that were developed or improved by the agency's space program, including by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in Pasadena, California, and benefit people everywhere. "NASA works hard, not only to develop technology that pushes the boundaries of aeron ... read more
|
|||||||||||||
| The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2026 - SpaceDaily. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us. |