NASA Administrator Hails Agreement with Ad Astra

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Dec. 17, 2009

Katherine Trinidad 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1100 
katherine.trinidad@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-332

NASA ADMINISTRATOR HAILS AGREEMENT WITH AD ASTRA

WASHINGTON -- NASA and Ad Astra Rocket Company of Webster, Texas, have 
signed a Space Act Agreement that could lead to the testing of a new 
plasma-based space propulsion technology on the International Space 
Station. The Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR) 
engine initially was studied by NASA and is being commercially 
developed by Ad Astra. 

This is the first such agreement for a payload on the station's 
exterior and represents an expansion of NASA's plans to operate the 
U.S. portion of the space station as a national laboratory. This 
effort follows the success achieved by the agency last year in 
reaching multiple agreements to utilize internal station sites for 
this endeavor. 

"Ad Astra's Space Act Agreement with NASA offers an example of just 
the kind of research and technology development that we should be 
doing on the International Space Station, can do there, and cannot 
easily do anywhere else," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said. 
"Dr. Chang-Diaz's VASIMR engine concept has long held great 
theoretical promise for future high-efficiency space propulsion. With 
this agreement, we are taking the first steps down the road to its 
practical realization. I am grateful to the teams on both sides who 
have worked to develop a plan that yields a near-term step forward 
for both Ad Astra and NASA on this exciting prospect." 

NASA's Associate Administrator for Space Operations William 
Gerstenmaier and Ad Astra's President and Chief Executive Officer 
Franklin Chang Diaz signed the agreement on Dec. 8. The agreement is 
structured in a series of "gates," designed to allow the parties to 
assess milestones on an incremental basis while proceeding to flight. 
Upon the achievement of these milestones, NASA and Ad Astra envision 
that VASIMR will be launched to the station and be tested, for the 
first time, in the vacuum of space. 

The VASIMR project will pave the way in demonstrating a new class of 
larger, more complex science and technology payloads to be installed 
on the station's exterior. Smaller projects already have been started 
for installation inside the station as part of the effort to use the 
U.S. portion of the station as a national laboratory. NASA hopes the 
agreement with Ad Astra will encourage other entities, governmental 
and commercial, to pursue similar projects and to facilitate the 
success of those projects by providing a model for implementation. 

Chang-Diaz, a former astronaut and veteran of seven space shuttle 
flights is a plasma physicist. In 2001, the American Institute of 
Aeronautics and Astronautics awarded him the Wyld Propulsion Award 
for his 21 years of research on the VASIMR engine. 

For more information on the space station, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/station 

	
-end-



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