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ROBO SPACE
Brane Craft Proposal Awarded Phase 2 by NASA
by Staff Writers
El Segundo CA (SPX) Apr 12, 2017


The Brane Craft concept is a flat 3-foot x 3-foot spacecraft that is less than half the thickness of human hair.

NASA has awarded Dr. Siegfried Janson of The Aerospace Corporation (Aerospace) with the 2017 NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) Phase II grant award, worth approximately $500,000, for further development of his Brane Craft flat spacecraft proposal.

This award is one of 22 early-stage technical proposals that will transform the future of human and robotic exploration missions, introduce new exploration missions, and significantly improve current approaches to building and operating aerospace systems.

"It's great news that Dr. Janson's Brane Craft proposal has been selected to receive NASA's Phase II award," said Steve Isakowitz, Aerospace president and CEO.

"Innovation is embedded in the DNA of our employees. I'm thrilled that our company will play a major role in revolutionizing and shaping the future of small satellites and addressing the challenges of Space Situational Awareness."

The Brane Craft concept is a flat 3-foot x 3-foot spacecraft that is less than half the thickness of human hair.

Exceptionally light, maneuverable, and fuel-efficient, the funding for this concept will support the next steps to develop an extremely thin spacecraft that would serve as a large piece of high-tech plastic that would wrap around debris and remove it from the Earth's orbit.

The concept can best be compared to an automated spot cleaner in space, whose mission is limited only by its fuel payload.

Last year, the Brane Craft proposal was among 13 concepts that were awarded with the NIAC portfolio of Phase I awards with an overall value of $100,000 for nine months of initial definition and analysis of all proposals.

The NIAC brings in researchers and innovators in the scientific and engineering communities, including civil servants.

ROBO SPACE
Lockheed Martin gets license for military exoskeleton tech
Washington (UPI) Apr 11, 2017
Lockheed Martin announced plans to explore the military exoskeleton market after licensing bionic augmentation technology from B-Temia. By securing legal permission to use the product for defense-related applications, the company said it can use the technology to supplement its FORTIS industrial exoskeleton project. The effort aims to drastically reduce the workload for military and ind ... read more

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