Creating an All-New Space Look

While human beings are known to be good at many different things, our ability in terms of pursuing constant progression tops them all. You see, when you are able to grow so consistently, you end up setting yourself up for some significant milestones along the way. Now, if we were to contextualize this by bringing in the milestones we have stumbled upon so far, we’ll be enlisting an expansive range of unique elements, but despite all the quality in play here, we still won’t anything as unique as technology. Technology is such an anomaly because it pushes us to do things that wouldn’t even seem possible without it. This expectantly plays a big role in expanding our boundaries over time, and when the said is dynamic is really what you are playing with, you become more than likely to see some by-products popping up into the picture. Talk about these by-products under the real-world setting, we have already witnessed plenty, and yet one of the bigger ones we saw was our space industry. There weren’t many people who found the idea of a full-fledged space industry as possible. However, once the wheels got moving, the whole jigsaw started to make sense, and before we could realize, we were thinking of going to the moon, mars, and what not. Interestingly enough, NASA’s latest announcement touches upon a crucial aspect of all these potential expeditions.

NASA has officially awarded two companies, Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace, with contracts to build next-generation spacesuits, which are now expected to make their debut with the agency’s Artemis program. According to certain reports, the contracts are worth a whopping $3.5 billion, but mind you, they are not guaranteed, therefore giving NASA the ultimate flexibility to pick and choose their partner/s moving forward. While the spacesuits surely headline this deal, it will also cover every other equipment that might be neccassary for spacewalking throughout the mission. To make sure the final product is as informed as possible; NASA will notably share critical fight and ground-based data from previous spacewalks and the agency’s own Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit development project. At the moment, we don’t have any specific details on the design of the stated spacesuits, except what we do know is that both the companies are leaning towards a modular, lightweight, and flexible construction.

“With these awards, NASA and our partners will develop advanced, reliable spacesuits that allow humans to explore the cosmos unlike ever before,” said Vanessa Wyche, director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, “By partnering with industry, we are efficiently advancing the necessary technology to keep Americans on a path of successful discovery on the International Space Station and as we set our sights on exploring the lunar surface.”

 

Share

Related

Technology outlook in the Healthcare industry for 2021

To say that 2020 was a strange year is...

A New Chapter for a Tragic Story

As much as we, at times, like the possibility...

Bringing a New Direction to the Social Media Block

Human beings boast a ton of valuable traits, and...

Revolutionizing Clinical Trials: Evolution Summit 2025 Returns to San Diego

Marcus Evans is proud to announce the Evolution Summit...

Back in the Mix

Human beings enjoy many luxuries over the course of...

A Longstanding Ambition

Every phase in human life comes packaged together with...

A Prescription for Improved Safety

The pharmaceutical industry has been working in partnership with...

Citizen Acquires Harbor for an Undisclosed Fee; Hopes to Rejuvenate Market Position

As a society, we cannot afford to not replenish...

Latest

No posts to display

No posts to display