Communications, Navigation And In-Space Propulsion Technologies Selected For NASA Flight Demonstration

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Aug. 22, 2011

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


RELEASE: 11-272

COMMUNICATIONS, NAVIGATION AND IN-SPACE PROPULSION TECHNOLOGIES SELECTED FOR NASA FLIGHT DEMONSTRATION

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected three proposals as Technology 
Demonstration Missions to transform space communications, deep space 
navigation and in-space propulsion capabilities. The projects will 
develop and fly a space solar sail, deep space atomic clock, and 
space-based optical communications system. 

These crosscutting flight demonstrations were selected because of 
their potential to provide tangible, near-term products and infuse 
high-impact capabilities into NASA's future space operations 
missions. By investing in high payoff, disruptive technology that 
industry does not have today, NASA matures the technology required 
for its future missions while proving the capabilities and lowering 
the cost of government and commercial space activities. 

"These technology demonstration missions will improve our 
communications, navigation and in-space propulsion capabilities, 
enable future missions that could not otherwise be performed, and 
build the technological capability of America's space industry," said 
NASA Chief Technologist Bobby Braun at NASA Headquarters in 
Washington. "Optical communication will enable rapid return of the 
voluminous data associated with sending spacecraft and humans to new 
frontiers. High-performance atomic clocks enable a level of 
spacecraft navigation precision and autonomous operations in deep 
space never before achieved, and solar sails enable new space 
missions through highly efficient station-keeping or propellant-less 
main propulsion capabilities for spacecraft." 

The proposals selected for demonstration missions are: 
-- Laser Communications Relay Demonstration, David J. Israel, 
principal investigator at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt, Md. 
-- Deep Space Atomic Clock, Todd Ely, principal investigator at the 
California Institute of Technology/NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory 
in Pasadena, Calif. 
-- Beyond the Plum Brook Chamber; An In-Space Demonstration of a 
Mission-Capable Solar Sail, Nathan Barnes, principal investigator at 
L'Garde Inc., of Tustin, Calif. 

Technology Demonstration Missions are a vital element in NASA's space 
technology maturation pipeline. They prove feasibility in the 
environment of space and help advance innovations from concept to 
flight and use in missions. 
The advances anticipated from communications, navigation and in-space 
propulsion technology will allow future NASA missions to pursue 
bolder and more sophisticated science, enable human missions beyond 
low Earth orbit, and enable entirely new approaches to U.S. space 
operations. 

The Laser Communications Relay demonstration mission will fly and 
validate a reliable, capable, and cost-effective optical 
communications technology. Optical communications technology provides 
data rates up to 100-times higher than today's systems, which will be 
needed for future human and robotic space missions. The technology is 
directly applicable to the next generation of NASA's space 
communications network. After the demonstration, the developed space 
and ground assets will be qualified for use by near-Earth and deep 
space missions requiring high bandwidth and a small ground station 
reception area. 

The Deep Space Atomic Clock demonstration mission will fly and 
validate a miniaturized mercury-ion atomic clock that is 10-times 
more accurate than today's systems. This project will demonstrate 
ultra-precision timing in space and its benefits for one-way radio 
navigation. The investigation will fly as a hosted payload on an 
Iridium spacecraft and make use of GPS signals to demonstrate 
precision orbit determination and confirm the clock's performance. 
Precision timing and navigation is critical to the performance of a 
wide range of deep space exploration missions. 

The Solar Sail demonstration mission will deploy and operate a sail 
area 7 times larger than ever flown in space. It is potentially 
applicable to a wide range of future space missions, including an 
advanced space weather warning system to provide more timely and 
accurate notice of solar flare activity. This technology also could 
be applied to economical orbital debris removal and propellant-less 
deep space exploration missions. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration is collaborating with NASA and L'Garde Inc. on the 
demonstration. 

The clock and solar sail will be ready for flight in three years. The 
optical communications team anticipates it will take four years to 
mature the technology for flight. NASA's Office of the Chief 
Technologist plans to make a total investment in these three missions 
of approximately $175 million, contingent on future appropriations. 
Each of the selected teams also will receive funding from partners 
who plan on using the technologies as part of future space missions. 

Projects include all elements of the flight test demonstration 
including test planning, flight hardware, launch, ground operations, 
and post-testing assessment and reporting. Each team has proposed 
between one and two years of spaceflight operations and data 
analysis. To reduce cost, the technology demonstrations will ride to 
space with other payloads aboard commercially provided launch 
vehicles. Launches are anticipated in 2015 and 2016. 

The Technology Demonstration Missions program is managed by NASA's 
Office of the Chief Technologist. For more information about the 
program, visit: 










http://www.nasa.gov/oct 

	
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