| April 06, 2023 RELEASE 23-041 NASA Awards Innovative Concept Studies for Science, Exploration
Technology in development today could radically change the future of air and space exploration. Nearly silent electric aircraft could ferry people and packages around cities, a sprawling radio telescope array on the far side of the Moon could reveal new secrets about the universe, and astronauts on long-duration missions could grow their own medicines to protect their health. These concepts are among six selected for continued study under the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program. The new round of Phase II awards fund six researchers to continue work on futuristic concepts designed to shape air and space travel decades in the future. âNASAâs story is one of barriers broken and technologies transformed to support our missions and benefit all of humanity,â said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. âThe concepts selected under NASAâs Innovative Advanced Concepts program will help empower researchers to usher in new technologies that could revolutionize exploration in the heavens and improve daily life here on Earth.â NIAC nurtures visionary ideas that could transform future NASA missions by funding early-stage technology concept studies. The Phase II awards continue work on concept studies initiated under Phase I NIAC awards. During Phase II, fellows continue to develop their concepts and explore potential infusion options within and beyond NASA. "These new awards showcase the breadth of how NIAC-supported concepts can change exploration," said Jim Reuter, associate administrator for NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD). "From revolutionary propulsion systems for deep-space missions to advances in aviation to change how we travel here on Earth, these technologies would radically expand our capabilities in air and space." Each of the six fellows will receive up to $600,000 over two years to develop their concepts. The researchers selected to receive NIAC Phase II grants in 2023 are: Darmindra Arumugam, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California: Quantum Rydberg Radar for Surface, Topography, and Vegetation Steven Barrett, Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts: Silent, Solid-State Propulsion for Advanced Air Mobility Vehicles Philip Lubin, University of California, Santa Barbara, California: PI â Planetary Defense Christopher Morrison, Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation in Seattle: The Nyx Mission to Observe the Universe from Deep Space â Enabled by EmberCore, a High Specific Power Radioisotope Electric Propulsion System Ronald Polidan, Lunar Resources, Inc. in Houston: FarView Observatory â A Large, In-Situ Manufactured, Lunar Far Side Radio Array Lynn Rothschild, NASA's Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley: A Flexible, Personalized, On-Demand Astropharmacy The NIAC program is funded by STMD, which develops new cross-cutting technologies and capabilities for NASA's current and future missions. Learn more about NIAC at: -end- | |
 | Press Contacts Sarah Frazier | |
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