Saturday, August 1, 2020

NASA Opens Call for Student Competition to Design Deep Space Mission Concepts - UNIVERSE


Credits: NASA

The 2021 Revolutionary Aerospace Systems Concepts – Academic Linkage (RASC-AL) Competition is seeking undergraduate and graduate teams to develop innovative concepts that would allow the expansion of human space exploration to include long-term stays and visits to distant planetary bodies including Venus and Ceres.
Through the Artemis program, a new era of human-robotic exploration will begin at the Moon’s South Pole. Together with U.S. industry and international partners, NASA is working to establish sustainable lunar exploration that will generate new markets as well as scientific and economic opportunities.
“As we look forward to the first woman and the next man on the lunar surface, RASC-AL provides authentic, real-world opportunities for university-level students to explore, envision and present fresh business and technological approaches that could enhance our human exploration efforts," said Doug Craig, strategic analysis and planning manager in NASA's Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate (HEOMD) at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
NASA is seeking proposals that demonstrate originality and creativity in the areas of engineering and analysis and address one of the following five themes:
• Theme 1 – Durable Low-mass Lunar Surface Habitat: Develop a low-mass, reusable habitat that can support a crew of two astronauts for 30 days at the lunar South Pole by 2028, identifying how the habitat can support both expanded crew capabilities on the lunar surface and preparations for future Mars missions.
• Theme 2 – Minimum Mars Ascent Vehicle: Develop a Mars ascent vehicle system and mission concept that can deliver a crew of two astronauts from the surface of Mars to a low Mars orbit with a significantly lower mass than previous concepts by the end of 2034.
• Theme 3 – Venus Flyby Mission: Develop a mission concept supporting a crew of four astronauts for a flyby of Venus in the 2030s that serves as a proving ground for longer-duration human missions to Mars, addresses how emerging commercial space capabilities support the mission and identifies what planetary science payloads could be delivered during the flyby to explore the atmosphere and/or surface of Venus.
• Theme 4 – Human Mission to Ceres: Develop a mission concept that supports a crew of four astronauts and identifies planetary science payloads on a mission to Ceres, with two astronauts landing on the dwarf planet in the 2040s.
• Theme 5 – Distributed Lunar Sample Aggregation, Analysis and Return to the International Space Station: Design an architecture that can return samples from multiple locations on the lunar surface to the space station, addressing lunar science priorities, what samples can be collected, how the samples are aggregated and analyzed on the lunar surface, and how the samples are returned to the space station without using Artemis program hardware.
Submissions are due by March 4, 2021, and must include a two-minute video and a detailed seven-to-nine-page proposal that presents novel and robust applications that address one of the five themes and supports expanding humanity’s ability to live and explore far from Earth.
NASA and industry experts will select up to 15 teams to continue developing their proposed concepts, and finalist teams will be announced in March. Selected teams will receive a $6,000 stipend to participate in the RASC-AL Forum in Cocoa Beach, Florida, scheduled for June 2021. The top two teams will also receive a travel stipend to present their projects to a wider audience at a major aerospace conference.
“What we learn when women and men explore the Moon will pave the way for humanity’s next giant leap—sending astronauts to Mars, and ultimately to other distant worlds,” said Patrick Troutman, human exploration strategic assessments lead, NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. “Students competing in RASC-AL pave the way to their own future as well, through a once-in-a-lifetime collaborative experience they will take with them into their careers.”
RASC-AL is sponsored by NASA’s Advanced Exploration Systems division within the HEOMD and the Space Mission Analysis Branch at NASA Langley and is managed by the National Institute of Aerospace.
For more information about the challenge, visit the RASC-AL website:
For more information about NASA’s Moon and Mars exploration plans, visit:

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