Representatives of the companies were aboard the aircraft to operate and evaluate their technologies during the flights, which created zero-gravity and lunar-gravity conditions. Weightless conditions are achieved by flying an airplane on a parabolic trajectory. A typical flight lasting two hours consists of 50 parabolas, generating up to 25 seconds of microgravity during each parabola. The technologies will improve air and space vehicle capabilities and support the design of systems for the exploration of the moon and operations there. NASA's contract with the Zero Gravity Corporation of Las Vegas, which is managed by NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, is part of an effort to expand the agency's use of commercial services. A call for new proposals for FAST program flights in 2009 will be issued later this month and will be open to any companies or organizations working on technologies of value to NASA.
Satnews Daily
September 16th, 2008
FAST Action By NASA + Innovative Partners
For the first time last week, NASA used microgravity research flights aboard commercially-owned aircraft to test hardware and technologies. These flights, on an airplane operated by the Zero Gravity Corporation, simulated the weightless conditions of space. In addition to numerous NASA experiments, five companies sponsored by the agency's Innovative Partnerships Program flew experiments aboard the reduced-gravity aircraft flights from Ellington Field in Houston. These flights were the first in NASA's Facilitated Access to the Space Environment for Technology Development and Training program, called
FAST. The companies, which are participating in the Small Business
Innovation Research program, tested five new technologies from September 9th through the 10th:
Pneumatic mining under lunar gravity conditions (Honeybee Robotics of New York)
Aircraft sensor-logger operations (Metis Design Corporation of
Cambridge, Massachusetts)
Microgravity flight testing of self-deploying shells (Mevicon Inc.
of Sunnyvale, California)
Virtual sensor test instrumentation operations (Mobitrum Corporation
of Silver Spring, Maryland)
Nanofluid coolant testing (nanoComposix, Inc. of San Diego, California)
Select this image for additional info...
Representatives of the companies were aboard the aircraft to operate and evaluate their technologies during the flights, which created zero-gravity and lunar-gravity conditions. Weightless conditions are achieved by flying an airplane on a parabolic trajectory. A typical flight lasting two hours consists of 50 parabolas, generating up to 25 seconds of microgravity during each parabola. The technologies will improve air and space vehicle capabilities and support the design of systems for the exploration of the moon and operations there. NASA's contract with the Zero Gravity Corporation of Las Vegas, which is managed by NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, is part of an effort to expand the agency's use of commercial services. A call for new proposals for FAST program flights in 2009 will be issued later this month and will be open to any companies or organizations working on technologies of value to NASA.
Select this image for additional info...
Representatives of the companies were aboard the aircraft to operate and evaluate their technologies during the flights, which created zero-gravity and lunar-gravity conditions. Weightless conditions are achieved by flying an airplane on a parabolic trajectory. A typical flight lasting two hours consists of 50 parabolas, generating up to 25 seconds of microgravity during each parabola. The technologies will improve air and space vehicle capabilities and support the design of systems for the exploration of the moon and operations there. NASA's contract with the Zero Gravity Corporation of Las Vegas, which is managed by NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, is part of an effort to expand the agency's use of commercial services. A call for new proposals for FAST program flights in 2009 will be issued later this month and will be open to any companies or organizations working on technologies of value to NASA.

