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PSW 2477 Space Architecture

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Lecture Starts at: Kessler 12:10; Morgan 35:40; Inocente 1:07:08; Clinton 1:24:36
www.pswscience.org
PSW #2477, 92nd Joseph Henry Lecture
May 19, 2023
Architecture for the New Space Age
Learning to Work and Live Beyond Earth
Detailed Information is here: https://pswscience.org/meeting/2477/

(1) A Home in Space: Future Space Habitat Development Efforts at NASA
Paul D. Kessler
Aerospace Technical Manager, NASA
NASA is in the early phases of planning the capabilities that will be needed for longterm exploration of the moon and Mars. This presentation will discuss these concepts, potential future technology and architecture development paths, and partnership activities being undertaken to achieve them.

(2) Architectures for Crewed Deep Space Missions: Taking Humans to the Moon, Mars and Beyond
Eleanor E. Morgan
Space Architect & Program Manager, Lockheed Martin
This lecture will discuss mission architectures for future orbital, surface, and transport spacecraft that Lockheed Martin is working on in partnership with industry, academia, and government partners to enable future expeditions to the Moon and Mars.

(3) Human Centered Space Architecture: Possibilities for Working and Living on Other Worlds
Daniel Inocente
Senior Space Architect, Blue Origin
Establishing a sustained human presence on the moon and elsewhere in the solar system is a challenging undertaking that requires complex infrastructure and capabilities to support human and robotic activities. This lecture will discuss new ideas for lunar habitat architecture that can enable the much larger ecosystem needed to build the foundation for future exploration and resource development on the moon and elsewhere.

(4) OnDemand Infrastructure for the Moon, Mars, and Other Worlds: Make It — Don’t Take It
Raymond "Corky" Clinton
Senior Technical Advisor, Science & Technology Office
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
This lecture will focus on development of capabilities enabling ondemand construction of lunar infrastructure. A brief overview of NASA’s Moon to Mars Planetary Autonomous Construction Technology (MMPACT) project will include plans for testing of the various candidate lunar construction materials, preliminary design concepts for future lunar infrastructure elements, and the vision for future extraterrestrial technology demonstrations.

www.pswscience.org

posted by samfeldurix