SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year #Science #Space #SpaceTechnology #SpaceX #Starship
https://purescience.news/article?id=959155
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year

On its surface, the flight plan for SpaceX's next Starship flight looks a lot like the last one. The rocket's Super Heavy booster will again splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico just offshore from SpaceX's launch site in South Texas. And Starship itself, the rocket's upper stage, will fly on a suborbital arc before reentering the atmosphere over the Indian Ocean for a water landing northwest of Australia. SpaceX will again test the rocket's satellite deployer and reignite one of the ship's Raptor engines in space to adjust the vehicle's path for reentry. These demonstrations will pave the way for future Starship flights into low-Earth orbit. All of the rocket's ascents to date have, by design, ended before reaching orbital velocity. Read full article Comments

Pure Science News
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year #Science #Space #SpaceTechnology #SpaceX #Starship
https://purescience.news/article?id=959155
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year

On its surface, the flight plan for SpaceX's next Starship flight looks a lot like the last one. The rocket's Super Heavy booster will again splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico just offshore from SpaceX's launch site in South Texas. And Starship itself, the rocket's upper stage, will fly on a suborbital arc before reentering the atmosphere over the Indian Ocean for a water landing northwest of Australia. SpaceX will again test the rocket's satellite deployer and reignite one of the ship's Raptor engines in space to adjust the vehicle's path for reentry. These demonstrations will pave the way for future Starship flights into low-Earth orbit. All of the rocket's ascents to date have, by design, ended before reaching orbital velocity. Read full article Comments

Pure Science News
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year #Science #Space #SpaceTechnology #SpaceX #Starship
https://purescience.news/article?id=959155
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year

On its surface, the flight plan for SpaceX's next Starship flight looks a lot like the last one. The rocket's Super Heavy booster will again splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico just offshore from SpaceX's launch site in South Texas. And Starship itself, the rocket's upper stage, will fly on a suborbital arc before reentering the atmosphere over the Indian Ocean for a water landing northwest of Australia. SpaceX will again test the rocket's satellite deployer and reignite one of the ship's Raptor engines in space to adjust the vehicle's path for reentry. These demonstrations will pave the way for future Starship flights into low-Earth orbit. All of the rocket's ascents to date have, by design, ended before reaching orbital velocity. Read full article Comments

Pure Science News
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year #Science #Space #SpaceTechnology #SpaceX #Starship
https://purescience.news/article?id=959155
SpaceX has a few tricks up its sleeve for the last Starship flight of the year

On its surface, the flight plan for SpaceX's next Starship flight looks a lot like the last one. The rocket's Super Heavy booster will again splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico just offshore from SpaceX's launch site in South Texas. And Starship itself, the rocket's upper stage, will fly on a suborbital arc before reentering the atmosphere over the Indian Ocean for a water landing northwest of Australia. SpaceX will again test the rocket's satellite deployer and reignite one of the ship's Raptor engines in space to adjust the vehicle's path for reentry. These demonstrations will pave the way for future Starship flights into low-Earth orbit. All of the rocket's ascents to date have, by design, ended before reaching orbital velocity. Read full article Comments

Pure Science News

1926 March 16
Robert H. Goddard (1882-1945)
launched 1st successful liquid-fueled #rocket
& Space Age (only the world didn't know it yet)

reached a height of 41 ft & traveled a distance of 180 ft in a flight lasting 3 sec

100 yrs later, still basis for #spaceflight

photograph by E. C. Goddard, 1926, Library of Congress Digital ID cph.3c10433, public domain
#spacetechnology #histsci #physics #areospace #engineering

Africa: Kenya Urges Africa to Invest in Space Technology to Improve Disaster Management: [Capital FM] Nairobi -- Kenya has urged African countries to invest more seriously in space technology and data systems to better manage disasters such as floods and droughts, with officials saying the continent must strengthen its own satellite capabilities while expanding partnerships that support innovation. http://newsfeed.facilit8.network/TRQTsD #Africa #Kenya #SpaceTechnology #DisasterManagement #Innovation
How Next-Gen Spacecraft Are Overwhelming Our Communication Networks

The aerospace industry has been undergoing a boom. High resolution Earth Observation satellites and complex multi-instrument science spacecraft are more capa...

Anthony T's Blog
Lunar Challenge Winner Tests Technology in NASA Thermal Vacuum Chamber #Science #TechnologyandEngineering #LunarChallenge #NASA #SpaceTechnology
https://purescience.news/article?id=958097
Lunar Challenge Winner Tests Technology in NASA Thermal Vacuum Chamber

By Savannah Bullard One year after winning second place in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, members of the small business Starpath visited NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, as part of their prize opportunity to test their upgraded lunar regolith excavation and transportation rover in the center’s 20-foot thermal vacuum chamber. The technology startup headquartered in Hawthorne, California, won second place overall at the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. This competition, one of NASA’s Centennial Challenges, tasked competitors to design, build, and demonstrate robotic technologies that could excavate and transport the icy, rocky dirt – otherwise known as regolith – found on the Moon. Starpath team members (foreground: Josh Kavilaveettil, mechanical engineer; background: Aakash Ramachandran, lead rover engineer) put their upgraded lunar regolith rover to the test inside NASA Marshall’s 20-foot thermal vacuum chamber – a prize opportunity marking one year since their 2nd place win in the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge. NASA/Joe Kuner “NASA’s Centennial Challenges are a great way to discover new, innovative technologies, including those for future use on the Moon and even Mars,” said Naveen Vetcha, Break the Ice Lunar Challenge manager at NASA Marshall. “Working with winners after the challenge concludes is a perfect example of how we can use NASA facilities to continue advancing these technologies to generate valuable solutions for the agency and industry.” Starpath built a four-wheeled rover capable of excavating, collecting, and hauling material under extremely harsh environmental conditions that simulate the lunar South Pole. On the rover, a dual drum barrel can extend from the body of the robot – mimicking a movement similar to a crab’s claws – and scrape into rough, hard regolith to excavate material quickly without compromising finite battery life. Before Starpath made the 2,000-mile drive from California to Alabama this summer, NASA Marshall’s Engineering Test Facility staff prepared a concrete slab outfitted with rocky terrain to act as a testbed for the robot to interact inside the chamber. The V-20 Thermal Vacuum Chamber, located at Marshall’s Environmental Test Facility, can simulate harsh environments by manipulating the chamber’s vacuum, temperature, humidity, and pressure effects. Starpath staff spent about three days at NASA Marshall in August, testing their robot with excavation and mobility trials while collecting data on its performance. The Starpath team is honing the development of its technology for missions located at the permanently shadowed regions of the lunar South Pole. As a future landing site for NASA’s Artemis missions, which will send astronauts to the Moon and prepare to send the first Americans to Mars, the South Pole region of the Moon is known to contain ice within its regolith. This was the leading inspiration behind the development of the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, as NASA will require robust technologies that can excavate and transport lunar ice for extraction, purification, and use as drinking water or rocket fuel. Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, two members of the Starpath team remotely operate the rover and run data in preparation for its entrance to the V20 Thermal Vacuum Chamber. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, employees from NASA Marshall’s Environmental Test Facility work with the Starpath team to carefully maneuver the rover onto a platform that will slide the rover into the chamber. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, employees from NASA Marshall’s Environmental Test Facility situate the rover over the concrete slab that it will operate on before removing the suspension straps that lifted it onto the platform. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the rover finally freely rests on its concrete slab at the end of the platform. The large metal structure will slide into the chamber, bringing the rover and concrete slab with it. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, NASA Environmental Test Facility employees work with members from the Starpath team to push the sliding platform into the thermal vacuum chamber, with the heavy rover and concrete slab in tow. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the large concrete platform is fully slid into the vacuum chamber, and members from the Starpath team discuss what final preparations need to be made before the chamber is closed. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the rover sits on a concrete slab that will be used to mimic the rugged lunar surface. The slab features a sandy, rocky terrain, and lamps within the chamber will turn on and off to simulate sunlight. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, Starpath mechanical engineer Josh Kavilaveettil monitors a component of the rover, attached to wires, in preparation for testing. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the rover sits atop its concrete slab at the mouth of the thermal vacuum chamber, ready to be closed in and commence testing. NASA/Joe Kuner NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge was a NASA Centennial Challenge that ran from 2020 to 2024. The challenge was led by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center with support from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Centennial Challenges are part of the Prizes, Challenges, and Crowdsourcing program under NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate. For more information about the challenge and its conclusion, visit: nasa.gov/winit Explore More 2 min read Join NASA on Oct. 4 in Looking Up, Celebrating Moon Join observers from around the world on Saturday, Oct. 4, for NASA’s International Observe the… Article 1 hour ago 3 min read I Am Artemis: Diamond St. John Article 3 hours ago 3 min read NASA Opens 2026 Human Lander Challenge for Life Support Systems, More Article 23 hours ago Keep Exploring Discover More Topics From NASA Centennial Challenges Space Technology Mission Directorate Humans In Space Artemis

Pure Science News
Lunar Challenge Winner Tests Technology in NASA Thermal Vacuum Chamber #Science #TechnologyandEngineering #LunarChallenge #NASA #SpaceTechnology
https://purescience.news/article?id=958097
Lunar Challenge Winner Tests Technology in NASA Thermal Vacuum Chamber

By Savannah Bullard One year after winning second place in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, members of the small business Starpath visited NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, as part of their prize opportunity to test their upgraded lunar regolith excavation and transportation rover in the center’s 20-foot thermal vacuum chamber. The technology startup headquartered in Hawthorne, California, won second place overall at the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. This competition, one of NASA’s Centennial Challenges, tasked competitors to design, build, and demonstrate robotic technologies that could excavate and transport the icy, rocky dirt – otherwise known as regolith – found on the Moon. Starpath team members (foreground: Josh Kavilaveettil, mechanical engineer; background: Aakash Ramachandran, lead rover engineer) put their upgraded lunar regolith rover to the test inside NASA Marshall’s 20-foot thermal vacuum chamber – a prize opportunity marking one year since their 2nd place win in the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge. NASA/Joe Kuner “NASA’s Centennial Challenges are a great way to discover new, innovative technologies, including those for future use on the Moon and even Mars,” said Naveen Vetcha, Break the Ice Lunar Challenge manager at NASA Marshall. “Working with winners after the challenge concludes is a perfect example of how we can use NASA facilities to continue advancing these technologies to generate valuable solutions for the agency and industry.” Starpath built a four-wheeled rover capable of excavating, collecting, and hauling material under extremely harsh environmental conditions that simulate the lunar South Pole. On the rover, a dual drum barrel can extend from the body of the robot – mimicking a movement similar to a crab’s claws – and scrape into rough, hard regolith to excavate material quickly without compromising finite battery life. Before Starpath made the 2,000-mile drive from California to Alabama this summer, NASA Marshall’s Engineering Test Facility staff prepared a concrete slab outfitted with rocky terrain to act as a testbed for the robot to interact inside the chamber. The V-20 Thermal Vacuum Chamber, located at Marshall’s Environmental Test Facility, can simulate harsh environments by manipulating the chamber’s vacuum, temperature, humidity, and pressure effects. Starpath staff spent about three days at NASA Marshall in August, testing their robot with excavation and mobility trials while collecting data on its performance. The Starpath team is honing the development of its technology for missions located at the permanently shadowed regions of the lunar South Pole. As a future landing site for NASA’s Artemis missions, which will send astronauts to the Moon and prepare to send the first Americans to Mars, the South Pole region of the Moon is known to contain ice within its regolith. This was the leading inspiration behind the development of the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, as NASA will require robust technologies that can excavate and transport lunar ice for extraction, purification, and use as drinking water or rocket fuel. Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, two members of the Starpath team remotely operate the rover and run data in preparation for its entrance to the V20 Thermal Vacuum Chamber. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, employees from NASA Marshall’s Environmental Test Facility work with the Starpath team to carefully maneuver the rover onto a platform that will slide the rover into the chamber. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, employees from NASA Marshall’s Environmental Test Facility situate the rover over the concrete slab that it will operate on before removing the suspension straps that lifted it onto the platform. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the rover finally freely rests on its concrete slab at the end of the platform. The large metal structure will slide into the chamber, bringing the rover and concrete slab with it. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, NASA Environmental Test Facility employees work with members from the Starpath team to push the sliding platform into the thermal vacuum chamber, with the heavy rover and concrete slab in tow. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the large concrete platform is fully slid into the vacuum chamber, and members from the Starpath team discuss what final preparations need to be made before the chamber is closed. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the rover sits on a concrete slab that will be used to mimic the rugged lunar surface. The slab features a sandy, rocky terrain, and lamps within the chamber will turn on and off to simulate sunlight. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, Starpath mechanical engineer Josh Kavilaveettil monitors a component of the rover, attached to wires, in preparation for testing. NASA/Joe Kuner Starpath, one of three winning teams in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, was invited by NASA Centennial Challenges to test their lunar excavation and traversal rover at the agency’s thermal vacuum chamber facility at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The invitation was an added perk to the team’s successful participation in Break the Ice, which took place from 2020 to 2024. A space hardware startup from Hawthorne, California, Starpath won a cumulative $838,461 across three levels of Phase 2 before winning second place overall at the challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. In this image, the rover sits atop its concrete slab at the mouth of the thermal vacuum chamber, ready to be closed in and commence testing. NASA/Joe Kuner NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge was a NASA Centennial Challenge that ran from 2020 to 2024. The challenge was led by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center with support from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Centennial Challenges are part of the Prizes, Challenges, and Crowdsourcing program under NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate. For more information about the challenge and its conclusion, visit: nasa.gov/winit Explore More 2 min read Join NASA on Oct. 4 in Looking Up, Celebrating Moon Join observers from around the world on Saturday, Oct. 4, for NASA’s International Observe the… Article 1 hour ago 3 min read I Am Artemis: Diamond St. John Article 3 hours ago 3 min read NASA Opens 2026 Human Lander Challenge for Life Support Systems, More Article 23 hours ago Keep Exploring Discover More Topics From NASA Centennial Challenges Space Technology Mission Directorate Humans In Space Artemis

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