Las Vegas, Jan 27 : NASA is partnering with a commercial space company in a bid to
replace the cumbersome "metal cans" that now serve as astronauts' homes in space
with inflatable bounce-house-like habitats that can be deployed on the
cheap.
A $17.8 million test project will send to the International Space
Station an inflatable room that can be compressed into a 7-foot tube for
delivery, officials said in a news conference at North Las Vegas-based Bigelow
Aerospace.
If the module proves durable during two years at the space
station, it could open the door to habitats on the moon and missions to Mars,
NASA engineer Glen Miller said.
The agency chose Bigelow for the contract
because it was the only company working on inflatable technology, said NASA
Deputy Administrator Lori Garver.
Founder and President Robert Bigelow,
who made his fortune in the hotel industry before getting into the space
business in 1999, framed the gambit as an out-of-this-world real estate venture.
He hopes to sell his spare tire habitats to scientific companies and wealthy
adventurers looking for space hotels.
NASA is expected to install the
13-foot, blimp-like module in a space station port by 2015. Bigelow plans to
begin selling stand-alone space homes the next year.
The new technology
provides three times as much room as the existing aluminum models, and is also
easier and less costly to build, Miller said.
Artist renderings of the
module resemble a tinfoil clown nose grafted onto the main station. It is hardly
big enough to be called a room. Miller described it as a large closet with
padded white walls and gear and gizmos strung from two central
beams.
Garver said that sending a small inflatable tube into space will
be dramatically cheaper than launching a full-sized module.
"Let's face
it; the most expensive aspect of taking things in space is the launch," she
said. "So the magnitude of importance of this for NASA really can't be
overstated."
The partnership is another step toward outsourcing for NASA,
which no longer enjoys the budget and public profile of its heyday. The agency
has handed off rocket-building to private companies, retired it space shuttles
in 2011 and now relies on Russian spaceships to transport American astronauts to
and from the space station.
Astronauts will test the ability of the
bladder, known as the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, to withstand
heat, radiation, debris and other assaults. Some adventurous scientists might
also try sleeping in the spare room, which is the first piece of private real
estate to be blasted into space, Garver said.
Bigelow said the NASA brand
will enable him to begin selling Kevlar habitats several times the size of the
test module.
"This year is probably going to be our kickoff year for
talking to customers," he said. "We have to show that we can execute what we're
talking about."
Bigelow, who launched a small prototype of the module in
2006 after licensing the patent from NASA, will rely on Boeing Co. and Southern
California rocket developer Space Exploration Technologies to provide
transportation.
A 60-day stay will cost $25 million, which doesn't
include the $27.5 million it costs to get there and back.
Bigelow
predicted that the primary customers will be upwardly mobile countries including
Brazil, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates that "have a difficult time
getting their astronauts into orbit" and could use a private space station to
barter and build up prestige.
The biggest technological challenge will be
transporting the collapsed module through the sub-zero temperatures of space
without tearing or cracking any part of it, Miller said.
When it arrives
at the space station in 2015, scientists will blow it up and let it sit for a
few days to test for leaks. If it does not hold as promised, NASA will take back
a portion of the already bargain basement price it paid Bigelow.
Standing
beside scale models of research stations on Mars and the moon, Miller said the
project will encourage commercial ventures to follow the path NASA blazes into
space.
He added that it could also help achieve the holy grail of space
exploration: missions that send astronauts out of orbit for more than a
year.
"The only way to do that is to expand it out and voila you have
living space for three people to go to Mars," he said. "You can get three times
the volume of a metallic can, and you can go up in the same
ferry."
Ends
SA/EN
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Space station to get $18 million balloon-like room
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