[meteorite-list] NASA to Host Media Teleconference on an Asteroid Initiative Broad Agency Announcement

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 21 Mar 2014 12:10:12 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <201403211910.s2LJAC6n026687_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

March 20, 2014
     
NASA to Host Media Teleconference on an Asteroid Initiative Broad Agency Announcement

NASA will host a media teleconference at 3 p.m. EDT Friday, March 21, to
discuss the same-day release of its Asteroid Initiative Announcement of
Opportunities.

Telecon participants are:

-- Greg Williams, deputy associate administrator for policy and plans, NASA's
Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate

-- James Reuther, deputy associate administrator for programs, NASA's Space
Technology Mission Directorate

-- Jim Green, director, Planetary Science Division, NASA's Science Mission
Directorate

This broad agency announcement (BAA) solicits ideas that will contribute to
NASA's asteroid redirect mission, including concept ideas for an alternate
asteroid capture system, rendezvous sensor systems, secondary payloads,
feasibility studies on adapting commercial spacecraft buses, and commercial
and international partnership opportunities for the mission.

Media who want to participate in the teleconference should contact Trent
Perrotto at trent.j.perrotto at nasa.gov or 202-358-1100 by 2 p.m. Friday.

The agency also will host an Asteroid Initiative Opportunities Forum
Wednesday, March 26, at NASA Headquarters in Washington to provide additional
information about the BAA. The forum, which will be carried live on NASA
Television and streamed online for virtual participants, includes an
opportunity for organizations interested in submitting responses to ask
questions about the announcement.

NASA's asteroid initiative includes two separate, but related activities:
the asteroid redirect mission and the grand challenge. NASA is currently
developing concepts for the redirect mission that will employ a robotic
spacecraft, driven by an advanced solar electric propulsion system, to
capture a small near-Earth asteroid or remove a boulder from the surface of a
larger asteroid. The spacecraft then will attempt to redirect the object into
a stable orbit around the moon.

Astronauts will travel aboard NASA's Orion spacecraft, launched on the Space
Launch System rocket, to rendezvous in lunar orbit with the captured
asteroid. Once there, they will collect samples to return to Earth for
study.

The grand challenge is a search for the best ideas for finding asteroids that
pose a potential threat to human populations, and to accelerate the work NASA
already is doing for planetary defense.

For more information about upcoming events and NASA's asteroid initiative,
visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/asteroidinitiative

-end-

Trent Perrotto
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1100
trent.j.perrotto at nasa.gov
Received on Fri 21 Mar 2014 03:10:12 PM PDT


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