Author: Brenda Marie Rivers|| Date Published: May 15, 2019
NASA has awarded $106M in total contract funds to 129 small businesses to further develop technology platforms that may help sustain human presence on the moon and Mars.
The companies submitted 142 innovation proposals to develop, demonstrate and deliver space-based systems for planetary missions under the second phase of NASA’s Small Business Innovation Research program, the agency said Wednesday.
Each awardee has the opportunity to receive up to $750K over two years.
Proposed technologies for SBIR Phase II include autonomous aircraft operation systems, sensor-based landing systems, next-generation magnets and an X-ray instrument for scanning planetary and asteroid rock samples.
Their innovations will help America land the first woman and the next man on the Moon in 2024, establish a sustainable presence on the lunar surface a few years later, and pursue exciting opportunities for going to Mars and beyond, said Jim Reuter, acting associate administrator of NASAs Space Technology Mission Directorate.
NASA selected the phase-two winners after a competitive evaluation process and said it will help fund the commercialization of resulting platforms in the third phase.
Quiet Professionals, Spathe Systems rebrand as Endurion. New platform combines intelligence, operations and mission technology support. Endurion launches following recent…
John Roese, global chief technology officer and chief artificial intelligence officer at Dell Technologies, said government agencies seeking to advance…
Stockholders of semiconductor foundry SkyWater Technology have approved the company’s merger with quantum computing company IonQ. Quantum computing and post-quantum…