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  2. NASA Launch Services Program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA_Launch_Services_Program

    The team's StangSat was accepted by the CubeSat Launch Initiative [129] and launched 25 June 2019 as part of ELaNa XV, via the Space Test Program, on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket. [130] The satellite, named StangSat after the school's Mustang mascot, will collect data on the amount of shock and vibration experienced by payloads while in orbit ...

  3. Commercial Orbital Transportation Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commercial_Orbital...

    Furthermore, if such services were unavailable by the end of 2010, NASA would have been forced to purchase orbital transportation services on foreign spacecraft such as the Russian Federal Space Agency's Soyuz and Progress spacecraft, the European Space Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicle, or the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's H-II ...

  4. Budget of NASA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budget_of_NASA

    NASA's budget as percentage of federal total, from 1958 to 2017. NASA's budget for financial year (FY) 2020 is $22.6 billion. [1] It represents 0.48% of the $4.7 trillion the United States plans to spend in the fiscal year. [2] Since its inception the United States has spent nearly US$650 billion (in nominal dollars) on NASA.

  5. Shuttle Training Aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuttle_Training_Aircraft

    NASA developed the STA using the Grumman Gulfstream II as the underlying aircraft platform. During the early phases of the Shuttle program, NASA considered using the Boeing 737 airliner as the basis for the STA, but rejected it due to cost and opted for the less-expensive Gulfstream II.

  6. Space Act Agreement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Act_Agreement

    These may be made available to others on a noninterference basis and consistent with the Agency's missions and policies. Nonreimbursable Agreements - Agreements that involve NASA and one or more Agreement Partners in a mutually beneficial activity that furthers the Agency's Missions. Unlike Reimbursable Agreements, each partner bears the cost ...

  7. Seeker (spacecraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seeker_(spacecraft)

    The Seeker free-flyer is a 3U CubeSat, approximately 30cm by 10cm by 10cm and weighing 4kg. It uses a cold-gas propulsion system with additively manufactured components, GPS, laser rangefinder, neural networks to drive a vision-based navigation system, Wi-Fi communication, and commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) parts wherever possible.

  8. FreeFlyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeFlyer

    FreeFlyer has been used to support many spacecraft missions, for mission planning analysis, operational analysis, or both. Specific mission examples include the International Space Station (ISS), [7] the JSpOC Mission System, [8] the Earth Observing System, [9] [10] Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), [11] and Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS).

  9. Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transiting_Exoplanet...

    While Kepler had cost US$640 million at launch, TESS cost only US$200 million (plus US$87 million for launch). [26] [27] The mission will find exoplanets that periodically block part of the light from their host stars, events called transits. TESS will survey 200,000 of the brightest stars near the Sun to search for transiting exoplanets. TESS ...