Posted on Nov 12, 2009 07:04:50 PM | Steven Gonzalez | 35 Comments
-
Last month the Advanced Planning Office pulled together a team to look at possible vision statements for the agency. I know a rather tall order, but it is always great to see the energy and creativity found within our JSC when it is unleashed. You can browse some of the ideas at the Open NASA post, NASA Vision and Mission. I know it isn't really a vision statement, but the one phrase that has stuck with me is "Creating the Future: One Giant Leap at a time." I really like the way it sums up the spirit of NASA and honors our past at the same time.
And the more that reflected on that phrase, the more I was struck by the recent events that demonstrated NASA's role in taking these giant leaps. The most recent is LaserMotive LLC winning $900,000 in NASA's 2009 Power Beaming Challenge. This one prize captures the imaginations of two communities and could seed a giant leap in either solar power beaming or a space elevator. LaserMotive won the prize by using a laser to power its robotic climber up a 900 meter cable that was suspended from a helicopter at Edwards Air Force Base in Mojave, California. The climber reached the top in just over 4 minutes, for an average speed of 3.7 meters per second and later repeated the feat at of 3.9 meters per second. Then on October 30th, Masten Space Systems won the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander X PRIZE Challenge. What is great about this joint prize between NASA and the X PRIZE Foundation is the community it is creating. I love the quote from Masten Space System's CEO, David Masten, "To come from not flying at all last year to qualifying for level one AND level two of the LLC this year shows how far our technology has progressed." Mark another one in the win column for NASA's ability to spur on Commercial Space.
Yet, what more can we do to take a giant leap forward. Could we partner with Japan on their plans to construct a solar power station in space and use it to beam energy down to Earth using lasers? Or do we build a space only cruiser? What would a space cruiser look like if it never needed to fight the gravity to get off the Earth or a planetary destination? Or is it too farfetched to create a prize for a non-rocket vehicle for access to LEO? While Commercial Space companies are investing in low cost access to Low Earth Orbit using rocket's should NASA partner up to create a prize that will look at the physics for the next LEAP forward in access to space?
OK, I have to say it… I'll even settle for a WARP drive X Prize.
So what prize would you create to make the next LEAP forward?
Sharing the Vision,
Steven González, Deputy, Advanced Planning Office
Tags : Inspiration, Space Policy
35 comments so far ( Post your own )
- 35
On Feb 04, 2010 03:16:04 PM
Christian
wrote:
Using a laser to power the robotic climber is incredible. Keep up the great work! Christian T-Shirts
- 34
On Feb 02, 2010 10:11:17 AM
Chris
wrote:
All NASA's efforts to conquer space and investigate the existence of life and water on other planets is truly fascinating.
What do the impending budget cuts portend for NASA's future though? - 33
On Feb 01, 2010 02:05:30 PM
guest
wrote:
The progress made in space has been amazing. Big ups Nasa!
Michael Mesa Miami - 32
On Jan 28, 2010 07:27:33 PM
dave
wrote:
The whole idea of a space elevator boggles the mind. I wish there was a video of Laser Motive's robotic climber.
Chiropractor in Canton MI
article submission service review
runner rugs - 31
On Jan 31, 2010 06:59:46 PM
mlm leads
wrote:
awesome stuff but nothing beats the best MLM Leads
- 30
On Jan 31, 2010 07:53:49 PM
davis
wrote:
The next generation could evolve to become more adept at living on near space objects (in special teraformed environments or life sustaining bases, the moon, mars and so on as mankind slowly evolves into the universe). dotcom.blogsome
- 29
On Jan 31, 2010 07:01:00 PM
Don Reid
wrote:
nice very nice
Don Reid - 28
On Feb 01, 2010 09:26:27 AM
Quiche
wrote:
"for an average speed of 3.7 meters per second" - not bad!
Quiche - 27
On Jan 29, 2010 07:17:14 PM
miki
wrote:
super super great article!!!!!!
Watch The Pacific Online - 26
On Jan 21, 2010 10:45:04 AM
Michael Mesa Miami
wrote:
Great read, I was never aware of the Power Beaming Challenge. Thanks for sharing.
- 25
On Jan 21, 2010 10:06:04 AM
Michael Mesa Miami
wrote:
Great article
- 24
On Jan 20, 2010 01:43:40 AM
Acai extreme
wrote:
Truly amazing.. keep up the excellent scientific innovations nasa! Acai berry extremeWow pvp bot
- 23
On Jan 20, 2010 01:16:05 AM
Gary Mart
wrote:
great experience so far on blog. every time I come here I found something useful ..i am a regular visitor of your blog ..so I always would like to appreciate your work with one comment.
href="http://www.personalloansunsecured.org">online unsecured loans|href="http://www.products-center.com/">Buy Digital product
|poor credit loans |href="http://www.todaycashpayday.com/">instant payday loan - 22
On Jan 14, 2010 10:56:53 AM
Neon
wrote:
Another generation could evolve to become more adept at living on certain near space objects (in special teraformed environments or life sustaining bases, the moon, mars and so on as mankind slowly evolves into the universe) We feel it is a mistake to expect one generation to
- 21
On Jan 16, 2010 03:51:34 AM
guest
wrote:
The same would entail the further study of varied gravity well adaptation and mutations as well as zero gravity development including stages from fertilization to full development of plant, animal and humanoid existence in full space, partial space and outside object (moon, mars, other planets and moons, bases underseas and so on)
Cheap HDTV Online Shopping |
Aliend | - 20
On Jan 15, 2010 09:08:18 PM
Shelly
wrote:
Excellent post, definitely made me think. I hope Japan does what they say. I hope they use some of the visco elastic mattress topper stuff nasa invented!
- 19
On Jan 12, 2010 11:59:22 AM
Mac
wrote:
Hi, really cool article.
I don't know if Japan will construct a solar power station in space.
That's great news.
Mac - 18
On Jan 11, 2010 09:44:48 AM
J.
wrote:
Steven,
I love the XPrize and the collaboration it is bringing out in different communities. By incentivizing through monetary goals the production of technology we can accelerate the lifecyle of that production. Lets face it, bragging rights are not enough. The scientists' backers are going to want a return on their investment as well. I wonder if we can improve our GPS system and whether Garmin GPS or some other company who wants to collaborate with Garmin GPS might be able to improve the GPS system. - 17
On Jan 11, 2010 12:05:31 AM
enomic
wrote:
Congratulations for this interesting featured picture! A whole new world...! |
USA Online Shopping Mall |
Social Bookmark Dofollow |
Best Article |
Best Article |
Dofollow Bookmark | - 16
On Jan 08, 2010 07:10:13 PM
John R.
wrote:
nice read
Alvin - 15
On Jan 08, 2010 03:29:16 AM
Ignatius Piazza
wrote:
Very great read
http://www.squidoo.com/ignatiuspiazza - 14
On Jan 06, 2010 12:28:00 AM
guest
wrote:
Very interesting post is it possible?? I really love it. Keep up the good work!
Blockbuster
Blockbuster
Blockbuster - 13
On Jan 02, 2010 06:04:46 AM
guest
wrote:
ATTENTION FUTURE MISSION PLANNERS:
Re: John Paul Edwards plan for space migration and species evolution studies.
Sirs, Please regard my proposals for studies of the effects of space migration and species evolution studies in space and underseas.
This porposal is for a grant to be aquired from NASA, JPL, the NSA and or feasible agencies for further studies of the effects of space migration and habitation on species conceptions, incubations, births and the ability of said generations of various species of plant, animal and humanoid to adapt to their future space homes.
The same would entail the further study of varied gravity well adaptation and mutations as well as zero gravity development including stages from fertilization to full development of plant, animal and humanoid existence in full space, partial space and outside object (moon, mars, other planets and moons, bases underseas and so on)
Early advisary to make New Orleans the first domed or undersea city and to further explore the colinization of our future UnderSea Cities. (ie. Atlantis)Much of the preparatiuons for space missions is done underwater and undersea explorations should be an integral part of any space mission. Therefor the study of the effects of undersea migration of plants, animals and humanoids is suggested as well. We would recommend that propogation in space begin in ernest and that humanoids
may in fact be the alien species we are looking for. (stop looking for alien life and go forward with becoming it) Our descendents could very well adapt once they migrate and become several various sub species of humanoid beings to inhabit the various regions of space and it's planetary objects. The generations that evolve in space (plant, animal, human) will adapt and perhaps mutate to better handle space exploration and so one. They could very well lose the ability to live in a gravity
well such as Earth and become specialy adapted to living in space.
Another generation could evolve to become more adept at living on certain near space objects (in special teraformed environments or life sustaining bases, the moon, mars and so on as mankind slowly evolves into the universe) We feel it is a mistake to expect one generation to
suddenly fling themselves into space and attempting migration without a natural space evolution. (ie. Timothy Leary's S.M.I^2.L.E. theory).. It is another matter indeed for us to breed space colonists and deep space travelers by conceiving and birthing them into the envoronment that they are in future generations to adapt and evolve into. Further study of these various and fascinating forms of evolution of species into space and undersea environments are as important as the coming of creatures out of the oceans to learn to adapt to and live on the land! Space and Undersea evolution is a critical aspect of our Space Explorations and further studies must indeed include it. It is our hope that this will reach someone whom will further contact us to further illucidate and examine the possibilities and to keep us pointed in a
Futurist(ic) direction in these matters. I think many many people will probably agree (some may even read this) that these are much needed areas of exploration that have apparently up until now been completely overlooked or at least hidden from public disclosure. Thank you for your time ands I would be looking forwards to hearing from interested and/or responsible parties who would like to know more about these
concepts and ideas along with my personal visions and views on these and variousother subjects. I look forward to working with you! Happiest of all the newest of decades is at hand lets get on with it!
j`Paul Edwards Atascadero, California, USA JpE 5:01 AM 1/2/2010 - 12
On Dec 21, 2009 09:57:13 AM
marco
wrote:
It's really?
calcolo mutuo - 11
On Dec 20, 2009 11:06:12 PM
Delonghi
wrote:
Deep space and planetary infrastructure planning wouldn't go unloved. A space born construction yard for the next generation of materials research and development.
Delonghi - 10
On Dec 17, 2009 02:16:51 PM
guest
wrote:
Wow, sounds very interesting. Do you think its possible?
Michael Mesa Miami - 9
On Dec 17, 2009 10:01:21 PM
voguehit
wrote:
hello.my friend ,here is wonderful place ,l like it ,thanks
- 8
On Dec 15, 2009 10:22:59 PM
Colon Cleanse
wrote:
I must admit that today is my first time I visit here. However, I have found so many interesting thing in your blog and I really love that. Keep up the good work!
- 7
On Dec 12, 2009 03:34:25 AM
alka
wrote:
Deep space and planetary infrastructure planning wouldn't go unloved. A space born construction yard for the next generation of materials research and development, in-space ship manufacturing, and a stepping stool towards harvesting the resources of the solar system? Yes please.
Colon Cancer Mobile Phone - 6
On Dec 11, 2009 05:27:23 PM
abhishek
wrote:
looks like a science fiction movie, but nasa can do it hope..!!
sell books online - 5
On Dec 07, 2009 02:26:25 PM
Diggha
wrote:
Well, A space born construction yard for the next generation of materials research and development, in-space ship manufacturing, and a stepping stool towards harvesting the resources of the solar system? Yes please.
Extenze - 4
On Nov 28, 2009 01:34:08 PM
Daniel
wrote:
Deep space and planetary infrastructure planning wouldn't go unloved. A space born construction yard for the next generation of materials research and development.
diarrhea - 3
On Nov 13, 2009 10:16:27 AM
guest
wrote:
Deep space and planetary infrastructure planning wouldn't go unloved. A space born construction yard for the next generation of materials research and development, in-space ship manufacturing, and a stepping stool towards harvesting the resources of the solar system? Yes please.
- 2
On Nov 13, 2009 08:26:44 AM
Victor G. D. de Moraes
wrote:
The best prize is the to make possible.
- 1
On Nov 13, 2009 06:23:22 AM
chris
wrote:
hui Great article,'m curious about how the future actually looks like. I let myself, but rather as a surprise ^ ^
greetings chris
Comment notes
Keep comments relevant. Inappropriate or offensive comments may be edited and/or deleted. Avoid adding Web site urls.
Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use
<p>or<br/>. Quotes, apostrophes, and double-dashes are automatically converted to smart punctuation. Be careful when copying and pasting portions of entries or other comments.