NASA Announces Latest Progress, Upcoming Milestones in
Hunt for Asteroids
NASA plans to launch the ARM robotic spacecraft in 2019 and will make a final choice of the asteroid for the mission about a year before the spacecraft launches. NASA is working on two concepts for the mission: the first is to fully capture a very small asteroid in open space, and the second is to collect a boulder-sized sample off of a much larger asteroid. Both concepts would require redirecting an asteroid less than 32 feet (10 meters) in size into the moon’s orbit. The agency will choose between these two concepts in late 2014 and further refine the mission’s design.
The agency will award a total of $4.9 million for concept studies addressing components of ARM. Proposals for the concept studies were solicited through a Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) released in March, and selected in collaboration with NASA's Space Technology and Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorates. The studies will be completed over a six-month period beginning in July, during which time system concepts and key technologies needed for ARM will be refined and matured. The studies also will include an assessment of the feasibility of potential commercial partners to support the robotic mission.
"With these system concept studies, we are taking the next steps to develop
capabilities needed to send humans deeper into space than ever before, and
ultimately to Mars, while testing new techniques to protect Earth from
asteroids," said William Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for NASA's Human
Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.