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NASA
and Space Technology By 2012
NASA Offers Millions For Space Technology Delivered By 2012
By Unexplainable.net
NASA seems to have a big interest in acquiring
top-notch space travel equipment by the year
2012. They are offering hundreds of millions
of dollars to companies who can design and build
high tech space travel vehicles. Why is the year
2012 so important to NASA and the Government?
Is this just a goal timetable, or is 2012 the
deadline? The NASA website clearly says "no
later than 2012", so this is a deadline.
According to President Bush's earlier speeches,
he plans to put men on the moon again by 2012.
He speaks about moon bases, manned Mars missions,
and the likes. Why this big space pushes by 2012?
According to the ancients, 2012 is supposed
to be the end of Human life, as we know it. A
dimensional shift. This theory is just gaining
creditability, even though it was preached more
than 5,000 years ago. If you are unfamiliar with
the theory, Google it. You will be overwhelmed
by the results.
One could argue NASA and Other Governmental
Agencies are aware of what will happen in 2012,
and are preparing for it, and others can argue
2012 is a random date that just happened to fall
in the same year as the Ancient Mayans and Sumerians
predicted.
In April, 2003 NASA Released This
NASA announced approximately $135 million will
be awarded to three competing contractor teams
to continue support of NASA's Orbital Space Plane
program under the Space Launch Initiative to
provide crew rescue and transfer capabilities
to the International Space Station. The three
system design contractor teams — The Boeing
Company of Seal Beach, Calif.; Lockheed Martin
Corp. of Denver; and a team including Orbital
Sciences Corp. of Dulles, Va., and Northrop Grumman
of El Segundo, Calif. — will each receive
approximately $45 million to design potential
candidates for the system, including the Orbital
Space Plane vehicle or vehicles, ground operations
and all supporting technologies needed to conduct
a mission to and from the Space Station.
NASA today announced approximately $135 million
dollars will be awarded to three competing contractor
teams to continue support of NASA’s Orbital
Space Plane program under the Space Launch Initiative
to provide crew rescue and transfer capabilities
to the International Space Station.
The awards are a part of a contract modification
of a Cycle 1 Space Launch Initiative solicitation
originally awarded in May 2001. This modification
extends existing contracts through July 2004.
The Orbital Space Plane program will provide
the capability for crew rescue by 2010 and the
capability for crews to transfer to and from
the International Space Station by 2012.
The three system design contractor teams — The
Boeing Company of Seal Beach, Calif.; Lockheed
Martin Corp. of Denver; and a team including
Orbital Sciences Corp. of Dulles, Va., and Northrop
Grumman of El Segundo, Calif. — will each
receive approximately $45 million to design potential
candidates for the system, including the Orbital
Space Plane vehicle or vehicles, ground operations
and all supporting technologies needed to conduct
a mission to and from the Space Station.
The contract modification includes work to develop
system specifications, including systems analysis,
trade studies and concept feasibility in preparation
for NASA’s Orbital Space Plane Program’s
Systems Requirements Review. The review, scheduled
for October 2003, will evaluate the concept design
based on the Level 1 requirements — guidelines
that lay out the foundation and top-level needs
of the system. The review will also set Level
2 requirements that will further narrow the scope
of the system design, including requirements
for crew safety, cost, and interfacing with launch
vehicles and the Space Station.
Once the Systems Requirements Review is complete,
the contractors will begin work on the next phase,
which includes trade studies, development of
a conceptual design that meets Level 2 requirements
and supporting analysis leading to NASA’s
Systems Design Review, scheduled for April 2004.
The Systems Design Review is a NASA-led review
to validate the Level 2 requirements and determine
Level 3 requirements to more precisely define
the needs and specifications of the system. A
full-scale development decision by NASA is expected
in the fall of 2004.
The Orbital Space Plane program supports U.S.
International Space Station requirements for
crew rescue, crew transport, and contingency
cargo such as supplies, food and other needed
equipment. The system will initially launch on
an expendable launch vehicle to provide rescue
capability for no fewer than four Space Station
crew members as soon as practical — but
no later than 2010. It will also provide transportation
capability for no fewer than four crew members
to and from the Space Station as soon as practical
-- but no later than 2012.
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This writing is not FACT as of now. This is
a theory that can be shot down and deemed improvable.
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