NASA Selects Visionary Advanced Technology Concepts For Study

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August 08, 2011

David E. Steitz 
Headquarters, Washington                                         
202-358-1730 
david.steitz@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 11-260

NASA SELECTS VISIONARY ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY CONCEPTS FOR STUDY

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected 30 proposals for funding under the 
NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts, or NIAC, program. The advanced 
concepts selected for study under NIAC were chosen based on their 
potential to transform our future space missions, enable new 
capabilities or significantly alter current approaches to launching, 
building and operating space systems. 

Each proposal will receive approximately $100,000 for one year to 
advance the innovative space technology concept and help NASA meet 
operational and future mission requirements. 

"These innovative concepts have the potential to mature into the 
transformative capabilities NASA needs to improve our current space 
mission operations, seeding the technology breakthroughs needed for 
the challenging space missions in NASA's future," said the agency's 
Chief Technologist Bobby Braun at NASA Headquarters in Washington. 

Proposals include a broad range of imaginative and creative ideas, 
such as: changing the course of dangerous orbital debris; a spacesuit 
that uses flywheels to stabilize and assist astronauts as they work 
in microgravity; the use of 3-D printing to create a planetary 
outpost; and multiple innovative propulsion and power concepts needed 
for future space mission operations. 

NASA's early investment and partnership with creative scientists, 
engineers and citizen inventors from across the nation will pay huge 
technological dividends and help maintain America's leadership in the 
global technology economy. 

NASA solicited visionary, long-term concepts for future technologies 
for maturation based on their potential value to NASA's future space 
missions and operational needs. These first NIAC projects were chosen 
based on being technically substantiated and very early in 
development -- 10 years or more from mission infusion. 

The portfolio of diverse and innovative ideas represented multiple 
technology areas, including power, propulsion, structures, and 
avionics, as identified in NASA's Technology Roadmaps. The roadmaps 
provide technology paths needed to meet NASA's strategic goals. 

The original NIAC program, known as the NASA Institute for Advanced 
Concepts, served agency needs from 1998 to 2007. It was an 
independent open forum for the external analysis and definition of 
revolutionary space and aeronautics concepts to complement the 
advanced concepts activities conducted within NASA. 

In 2008, Congress directed the National Research Council to conduct a 
review of NIAC's effectiveness and to make recommendations concerning 
the importance of such a program. Chief among the council's 
recommendations was NASA and the nation would be well served by 
maintaining a mechanism to investigate visionary, far-reaching 
advanced concepts as part of the agency's mission. Following an 
October 2009 hearing by the U.S. House of Representatives 
Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics, NASA re-established the NIAC 
program during fiscal year 2011. 

NASA's Office of the Chief Technologist manages the NIAC program. For 
a complete list of the selected proposals, and more information about 
the program, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/oct 

	
-end-



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