Experimental Payloads Selected For Commercial Suborbital Flights

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March 21, 2012

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

Leslie Williams 
Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif. 
661-276-3893 
leslie.a.williams@xxxxxxxx 

Rachel Hoover 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4789 
rachel.hoover@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-089

EXPERIMENTAL PAYLOADS SELECTED FOR COMMERCIAL SUBORBITAL FLIGHTS

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Flight Opportunities Program has selected 24 
cutting-edge space technology payloads for flights on commercial 
reusable launch vehicles, balloons and a commercial parabolic 
aircraft. 

Sixteen of the payloads will ride on parabolic aircraft flights, which 
provide brief periods of weightlessness. Five will fly on suborbital 
reusable launch vehicle test flights. Two will ride on high-altitude 
balloons that fly above 65,000 feet. One payload will fly on the 
suborbital launch vehicle and high-altitude balloon platforms. The 
flights will take place in 2012 and 2013. 

Flight platforms include the Zero-G parabolic airplane, Near Space 
Corp. high altitude balloons and reusable launch vehicles from 
Armadillo Aerospace, Masten Space Systems, UP Aerospace and Virgin 
Galactic. 

"NASA's Flight Opportunities Program leverages investment in 
commercially available vehicles and platforms to enable new 
technology discoveries," said Michael Gazarik, director of NASA's 
Space Technology Program at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "These 
flights enable researchers to demonstrate the viability of their 
technologies while taking advantage of American commercial access to 
near-space." 

Payloads selected for flight on a parabolic aircraft are: 
-- "Microgravity Health Care," Scott Alexander Dulchavsky, Henry Ford 
Health System, Detroit 
-- "Activity Monitoring During Parabolic Flight," Peter Cavanagh, 
University of Washington, Seattle 
-- "Physics of Regolith Impacts in Microgravity Experiment," Josh 
Colwell, University of Central Florida, Orlando 
-- "UAH CubeSat Parabolic Flight Testing," Francis Wessling, 
University of Alabama, Huntsville 
-- "Fuel Mass Gauging Under Zero-G Environment Based on Electrical 
Capacitance Volumatric Tomography Techniques," Manohar Deshpande, 
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
-- "Microgravity Effects of Nanoscale Mixing on Diffusion Limited 
Processes Using Electrochemical Electrodes," Carlos Cabrera, 
University of Puerto Rico, San Juan 
-- "Effects of Reduced Gravity on Flow Boiling and Condensation," 
Issam Mudawar, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind. 
-- "OSIRIS-REx Low-Gravity Regolith Sampling Tests," Joseph Vellinga, 
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, Denver 
-- "Parabolic Flight: Validation of Electro-Hydrodynamic Gas-Liquid 
Phase Separation in Microgravity," Boris Khusid, New Jersey Institute 
of Technology, Newark 
-- "Non-Invasive Hemodynamic Monitoring in Microgravity," Gregory 
Kovacs, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. 
-- "Parabolic Flight Evaluation of a Hermetic Surgery System for 
Reduced Gravity," George Pantalos, University of Louisville, 
Louisville, Ky. 
-- "Evaporative Heat Transfer Mechanisms within a Heat Melt Compactor 
Experiment," Eric Golliher, NASA's Glenn Research Center, Cleveland 
-- "Effects of Reduced and Hyper Gravity on Functional Near-Infrared 
Spectroscopy Instrumentation," Greg Adamovsky, NASA Glenn 
-- "Sintering of Composite Materials Under Reduced Gravity Conditions 
("Cosmic" Project), Orazio Chiarenza, the Advanced Technical 
Institute, Fuscaldo, Italy 
-- "Boston University Student Proposal for Deployable Solar and 
Antenna Array Microgravity Testing," Theodore Fritz, Boston 
University 
-- "Particle Dispersion System for Microgravity Environments," John 
Marshall, SETI Institute, Mountain View, Calif. 

Payloads selected for flight on a suborbital launch vehicle are: 
-- "Near-Zero Gravity Cryogenic Line Chilldown Experiment in a 
Suborbital Reusable Launch Vehicle," Jacob Chung, University of 
Florida, Gainesville, Fla. 
-- "Collection of Regolith Experiment on a Commercial Suborbital 
Vehicle," and "Collisions Into Dust Experiment on a Commercial 
Suborbital Vehicle, Josh Colwell, University of Central Florida, 
Orlando 
-- "Polar Mesospheric Cloud Imaging and Tomography Experiment," Jason 
David Reimuller, Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo. 
-- "Vision Navigation System Technology Demonstration," Douglas 
Zimpfer, Draper Laboratory, Houston 

Payloads selected for flight on a high altitude balloon are: 
-- "Flight Demonstration of an Integrated Camera and Solid-State Fine 
Steering System," Eliot Young, Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, 
Colo. 
-- "Initial Flight Testing of a UAT ADS-B Transmitter Prototype for 
Commercial Space Transportation Using a High Altitude Balloon," 
Richard Stansbury, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona 
Beach, Fla. 

The "Structural Health Monitoring for Commercial Space Vehicles" 
payload from Andrei Zagrai of the New Mexico Institute of Mining and 
Technology in Socorro, will fly on a suborbital launch vehicle and a 
high-altitude balloon. 

NASA manages the Flight Opportunities Program manifest, matching 
payloads with flights, and will pay for payload integration and the 
flight costs for the selected payloads. No funds are provided for the 
development of these payloads. Other suborbital flight vendors on 
contract to NASA will provide flights after they have successfully 
flown their qualifying vehicles. 

The Flight Opportunities Program, part of NASA's Space Technology 
Program, is managed at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in 
Edwards, Calif. NASA's Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif. 
manages the payload activities for the program. 

For more information on the Flight Opportunities program, visit: 

http://flightopportunities.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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