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NanoRacks Brings 40 Students Experiments to Space Station, New Commercial Customers
by Staff Writers
Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Jul 03, 2018

illustration only

Early this morning, Dragon, the spacecraft from the fifteenth SpaceX contracted resupply mission, berthed with the International Space Station carrying one of NanoRacks' largest educational missions to date. In addition to launching 40 student experiments, NanoRacks has also introduced a new commercial company and ongoing professional research into the commercial low-Earth orbit ecosystem.

NanoRacks brought the 12th Student Spaceflight Experiments Program (SSEP) mission to the Space Station. SSEP Mission 12 received 2,498 proposals from 31 communities. These proposals were narrowed down to 34 flight experiments, and through the whole process, engaged over 12,000 students in the aerospace experiment design process.

Three educational experiments from the Ramon Foundation in Israel also flew to the Space Station. The SSEP and Ramon Foundation experiments utilize NanoRacks' MixStix research platform. MixStix are mixture enclosure tubes which allow for a wide range of research - including material, biological, chemical testing, and more.

Additionally, NanoRacks flew two experiments, ARISE and PAPELL, as a part of the Uberflieger contest in partnership with DLR and DreamUp. ARISE investigates collisions and particle aggregation in space. PAPELL tests the functionality of a ferrofluid pump in microgravity. Learn more about the Uberflieger program here.

The last educational experiment on board comes from the Aurora Group. Utilizing a NanoRacks NanoLab, this investigation will test the effects of the cosmic environment on gold, quartz, beryl, and opal. Named "QUANTUM," this experiment utilizes materials with specific structures and semi-conductivity to best allow for cosmic infusion.

NanoRacks provided all of the above student research opportunities in partnership with DreamUp.

"This is such an exciting research mission for us at NanoRacks," says NanoRacks Senior Internal Payloads Manager, Mary Murphy.

"In just one mission, we are leveraging four commercially developed platforms on the International Space Station - MixStix, NanoLabs, the NanoRacks Microscope-3, and our External Platform. NanoRacks is truly breaking ground in commercial space station utilization and we're thrilled to be facilitating unique research opportunities for such a broad customer base."

MixStix and NanoLabs, both designed and introduced by NanoRacks, were the original commercial platforms that opened the door for affordable educational research on the International Space Station.

NanoRacks is also pleased to bring a new customer to the Space Station ecosystem. Orbital Sidekick launched "HEIST," which will mount on the NanoRacks External Payload Platform (NREP). HEIST is set to operate a compact hyperspectral sensor system for commercial Earth observation. Satellites with hyperspectral sensors allow users to obtain global data sets with a minimum amount of resources.

Lastly, NanoRacks launched Phase II of the Barrios Protein Crystal Growth experiment (Barrios PCG). Utilizing the NanoRacks third generation microscope, Barrios PCG analyzes and optimizes protein crystals and the use of 96-well crystallization plates on orbit. The Barrios PCG project is a joint program between Barrios Technology and NanoRacks.

With this launch, NanoRacks now has manifested over 700 payloads on missions destined for the International Space Station. This mission also marks NanoRacks 34th launch with commercial customers onboard since 2009.


Related Links
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SPACE TRAVEL
Hague, Ovchinin talk ISS mission during presser
Houston TX (AFNS) Jun 25, 2018
Surrounded by media representatives and audience members, Col. Nick Hague, NASA astronaut, and Alexey Ovchinin, Russian Roscosmos cosmonaut, discussed their upcoming trip to space during a news conference at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, June 18, 2018. The two will journey to the International Space Station Oct. 11, 2018, aboard the Roscosmos Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft, launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Their six-month mission serves one purpose. "We are up there ... ... read more

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