Small Businesses to Fly New Technologies on Zero-Gravity Flights

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July 15, 2008

Sonja Alexander
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1761
sonja.r.alexander@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-175

SMALL BUSINESSES TO FLY NEW TECHNOLOGIES ON ZERO-GRAVITY FLIGHTS

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Innovative Partnerships Program has selected 
seven Small Business Innovation Research program, or SBIR, companies 
to participate in reduced-gravity test flights in early September. 
The companies will have the opportunity to test their newly developed 
hardware on an aircraft that simulates the weightless conditions of 
spaceflight. The fights will the first by NASA's Facilitated Access 
to the Space Environment for Technology Development and Training 
program, called FAST.

Testing new technologies in weightless conditions is an important step 
in making them available for applications in NASA space projects. An 
aircraft flying on a parabolic trajectory can create weightless 
conditions for up to 30 seconds at a time and simulate the reduced 
gravity conditions of the moon or Mars. This allows developers to 
test new technologies to ensure that they will work in space or, if 
they do not work during testing, understand why. It is difficult for 
emerging technology developers, especially small businesses, to gain 
access to parabolic aircraft flights. Through FAST, NASA will provide 
a flight demonstration opportunity while the developer provides the 
technology.

The selection for the first round of flights was limited to companies 
that already have SBIR contracts with NASA. The technologies being 
flown address needs in each of NASA's four core mission directorates. 
In the future, the competition will be extended to any companies and 
laboratories working in partnerships on technology of value to NASA's 
missions. Another important aspect of FAST is that the Zero-Gravity 
Corporation of Las Vegas will conduct the flights as a commercial 
service to NASA.

The Zero-Gravity Corporation contract is managed by NASA's Glenn 
Research Center in Cleveland and is part of an effort to expand the 
agency's use of commercial services. The reduced-gravity flights will 
be conducted from Ellington Field in Houston. NASA's Johnson Space 
Center in Houston and Glenn are providing technical support to the 
participating companies.

The September flights will include the following projects and 
companies:

-- Vacuum-Compatible Multi-Axis Manipulator/Machining Center for 
Long-Duration Space Missions, Beck Engineering Inc., Port Orchard, 
Washington

-- Investigation of Pneumatic Mining System under Lunar Gravity 
Conditions, Honeybee Robotics Spacecraft Mechanisms Corporation, New 
York

-- Aircraft Sensor Logger, Metis Design Corporation, Cambridge, Mass.

-- Microgravity Flight Testing of Passively Self-Deploying Shells, 
Mevicon Inc., Sunnyvale Calif.

-- Virtual Sensor Test Instrumentation, Mobitrum Corporation, Silver 
Spring, Maryland

-- Nanofluid Coolants, nanoComposix Inc., San Diego

-- Constant-Force-Exercise Sled, Valeo Human Performance LLC, Houston

For more information about FAST, visit:

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

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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