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by Molly Porter for MSFC News Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 16, 2020
NASA is inviting additional teams to compete in the Cube Quest Challenge. You can still participate in the in-space phase of the challenge and be eligible to win part of a $4.5 million prize purse. The Cube Quest Challenge, NASA's first in-space competition, incentivizes teams to design, build and deliver small satellites capable of advanced operations near and beyond the Moon. To compete, new teams meeting the eligibility criteria must obtain a ride to deep space for their CubeSats - either through commercial launch opportunities or programs like NASA's CubeSat Launch Initiative. "We welcome new teams to join us in this challenge in pursuit of advancing space exploration," said Monsi Roman, program manager for NASA's Centennial Challenges. "When we established the Cube Quest Challenge in 2015, commercial flight opportunities weren't as available. Now that technology has advanced and commercial partners are flying payloads, it is a great time to make potential participants aware of the opportunity." Fifteen university and private developer teams have already competed for prizes to showcase creative CubeSat technologies through ground-based tournaments, or phase one, of the Cube Quest Challenge, which was completed in 2017. Three winners received spots as secondary payloads on Artemis I, the first integrated test flight of NASA's Space Launch System rocket and the Orion spacecraft. These teams have been working on their CubeSats, readying them for launch. Once deployed from the rocket, the teams will begin phase two, the in-space competition.
In-Space Competition Once in orbit, the CubeSats must complete various tasks outlined in the competition rules document to be eligible for prize money. To ensure data integrity, each satellite must transmit NASA-provided communications data to be eligible for prize money.
The Next Frontier Initiatives such as the Cube Quest Challenge aim to make deep space exploration more accessible and open up commercial space opportunities beyond low-Earth orbit. "The next frontier is small satellites. Development efforts are aimed at pushing the boundaries of CubeSat exploration beyond low-Earth orbit," Hyde said. The competition is a part Centennial Challenges, based at the NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Centennial Challenges is a part of the Prizes and Challenges program within NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate. The challenge is managed by NASA's Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley.
+ To register to compete in the challenge, visit https://www.nasa.gov/cubequest/howtoenter/
+ For more information of NASA's Cube Quest Challenge, visit here
+ For more information about NASA's Prizes and Challenges, visit here
First global map of rockfalls on the Moon Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Jun 09, 2020 In October 2015, a spectacular rockfall occurred in the Swiss Alps: in the late morning hours, a large, snow-covered block with a volume of more than 1500 cubic meters suddenly detached from the summit of Mel de la Niva. It fell apart on its way downslope, but a number of boulders continued their journey into the valley. One of the large boulders came to a halt at the foot of the summit next to a mountain hut, after travelling more than 1.4 kilometers and cutting through woods and meadows. On the ... read more
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