Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: September 15, 2021
NASA has awarded $146 million in contracts to five companies to develop lunar lander design concepts, perform risk reduction activities and offer feedback to inform requirements for a future solicitation on industry capabilities that could help facilitate regular manned missions to the moon under the space agency’s Artemis program.
“Establishing a long-term human presence on the Moon through recurring services using lunar landers is a major Artemis goal,” said Kathy Lueders, associate administrator for NASA’s human exploration and operations.
“This critical step lays the foundation for U.S. leadership in learning more about the Moon and for learning how to live and work in deep space for future missions farther into the solar system,” she added.
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…