EP52B-01
Smallsats, Cubesats and Scientific Exploration

Friday, 18 December 2015: 10:20
2003 (Moscone West)
Ellen R Stofan, NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC, United States
Abstract:
Smallsats (including Cubesats) have taken off in the aerospace research community – moving beyond simple tools for undergraduate and graduate students and into the mainstream of science research. Cubesats started the “smallsat” trend back in the late 1990’s early 2000’s, with the first Cubesats launching in 2003. NASA anticipates a number of future benefits from small satellite missions, including lower costs, more rapid development, higher risk tolerance, and lower barriers to entry for universities and small businesses. The Agency’s Space Technology Mission Directorate is currently addressing technology gaps in small satellite platforms, while the Science Mission Directorate pursues miniaturization of science instruments. Launch opportunities are managed through the Cubesat Launch Initiative, and the Agency manages these projects as sub-orbital payloads with little program overhead.

In this session we bring together scientists and technologists to discuss the current state of the smallsat field. We explore ideas for new investments, new instruments, or new applications that NASA should be investing in to expand the utility of smallsats. We discuss the status of a NASA-directed NRC study on the utility of small satellites. Looking to the future, what does NASA need to invest in now, to enable high impact (“decadal survey” level) science with smallsats? How do we push the envelope? We anticipate smallsats will contribute significantly to a more robust exploration and science program for NASA and the country.