NASA seeks commercial uses for space station

News

April 29, 2014 04:33 PM ET

Computerworld - NASA is reaching out to companies that want to use the International Space Station or low-Earth orbit for research or commercial space activities.

The space agency is asking for ideas from companies interested in using the orbiter to expand the U.S.'s commercial space industry or to propel technologies that will ultimately help NASA explore deep space.

"Now is an exciting time for space research and developing exploration capabilities," said William Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for Human Exploration and Operations at NASA, in a statement. "After 10 years of continuous habitation in low-Earth orbit, we know microgravity provides data unattainable on Earth. We are already seeing benefits in pharmaceuticals, medical robotics and materials sciences."

NASA's request for commercial proposals is expected to help the agency decide how to open up the orbiting laboratory to the private sector in better and more practical ways, according to Gerstenmaier.

"Ultimately, [this could help] to pave the way for private microgravity research facilities of the future," he said.

The ideas should focus on:

The complete proposal is available on NASA's website.

Proposals should be no more than 20 pages long and are due by June 30.

See the rest here:

NASA seeks commercial uses for space station

Related Posts

Comments are closed.