NASA Explores Future
Space With Advanced Concept Awards
(28 September 2004) The NASA
Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) has announced its 2004 Phase 1 awards.
Twelve proposals to boldly go beyond the frontiers of space exploration were
selected for a six-month study period beginning in October 2004.
The NIAC was created in 1998 to solicit revolutionary
concepts from people and organisations outside the agency that could greatly
advance NASA's missions. The proposals push the limits of known science and
technology. The proposals are expected to take at least a decade to be fully
realised. NIAC's intention is to discover ideas that may result in beneficial
changes to NASA's long-range plans.
"We are thrilled to team up with
imaginative people from industry and universities to discover innovative
systems that meet the tremendous challenge of space exploration and
development," said Dr. Robert Cassanova of the Universities Space Research
Organization (USRA), and NIAC director. The USRA runs the Institute for
NASA.
The NIAC sponsors research in two phases. Proposals selected for
Phase 1 awards typically receive up to US$ 75,000 for a six-month study that
validates the viability of the concept and identifies challenges that must be
overcome to make the proposal a reality.
The results of the Phase 1
studies are evaluated. The most promising are selected for further research
into the major feasibility issues associated with cost, performance,
development time, and technology through a Phase 2 award. Phase 2 studies can
be up to two years long and receive as much as US$ 400,000.
Proposals
selected for the 2004 Phase 1 awards:
(source: NASA)