FYI: Science Policy News
FYI
/
Article

NASA Funds Tech Maturation Projects For Future Telescopes

JUN 04, 2024
The grants aim to lay the groundwork for a telescope focused on searching for life outside the solar system.
AIP_Lindsay_McKenzie_800x1000.jpg
Science Policy Reporter, FYI AIP
Habitable worlds satellite concept art

An artist’s concept of one of the initial possible designs for NASA’s Habitable Worlds Observatory.

(NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab)

Last week, NASA selected three proposals from industry to help mature technologies needed for the proposed Habitable Worlds Observatory mission, which would focus on searching for life outside our solar system.

Billed as a “historically ambitious mission” by Mark Clampin, astrophysics division director at NASA, the telescope would require, for example, an optical system that does not move more than an atom’s width during observations.

The industry awards total $17.5 million, split between BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman. In announcing the awards, NASA also noted it is in the process of establishing a Habitable Worlds Observatory Technology Maturation project office at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

These actions respond to the latest astronomy decadal survey’s recommendation that NASA dedicate more resources to refining technologies needed for flagship telescopes before it commits to cost estimates, drawing on lessons learned from the James Webb Space Telescope.

Clampin and the former chief scientist of the Webb telescope, John Mather, will discuss NASA’s approach to developing next-generation telescopes at an event this Wednesday hosted by AIP. The event will be livestreamed.

This news brief originally appeared in FYI’s newsletter for the week of June 3.

Related Topics
/
Article
Women will join men in being honored on the Paris icon.
/
Article
The precision measurement and quantum communities are upset about the secretiveness of the move and its potential damage to US science.
/
Article
/
Article
In noisy biological environments, the fluorescent protein can pinpoint subcellular structures and detect magnetic field changes.
/
Article
Two cylinders rotating in a fluid can mimic the behavior of gears and of a belt-and-pulley system.
More from FYI
FYI
/
Article
FYI
/
Article
FYI
/
Article
Proposed changes would reduce independent oversight of RIFs and other disciplinary actions against federal employees.
FYI
/
Article
The head of the initiative emphasized the importance of data scaling and adding computational power in remarks at Brookhaven National Lab.
FYI
/
Article
Where the Trump administration has and has not stuck to the conservative policy blueprint.
FYI
/
Article
Science groups call for stable funding and streamlined regulations.

Related Organizations