Astrobotic

Astrobotic

Aviation and Aerospace Component Manufacturing

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 39,661 followers

Astrobotic is a space robotics company making space accessible to the world.

Über uns

Astrobotic is at the forefront of advancing space exploration and technology development. Our expertise spans a wide range of technologies, including suborbital rockets, orbital spacecraft, lunar spacecraft, and surface infrastructure. To date, Astrobotic has won more than 60 NASA, DoD, and commercial technology contracts collectively worth more than $600 million, including two lunar lander missions.

Website
http://www.astrobotic.com
Industrie
Aviation and Aerospace Component Manufacturing
Größe des Unternehmens
201-500 Mitarbeiter
Hauptsitz
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Typ
In Privatbesitz
Gegründet
2007
Spezialitäten
Space Robotics, Space, and Astronautics

Standorte

Employees at Astrobotic

Aktualisierungen

  • View organization page for Astrobotic, graphic

    39,661 followers

    "As NASA continues exploring the moon’s southern polar region to find ice, USF engineers are developing technology to make landing on the moon safer and less expensive...Known as A-LiST, the USF invention [precision terrain mapping technology] was integrated onto the lunar logistics company Astrobotic’s Xodiac rocket-powered lander for a flight that simulated a lunar landing." Read more: https://lnkd.in/eETQVB2P

    NASA’s permanent presence on the moon could begin with USF-invented mapping technology

    NASA’s permanent presence on the moon could begin with USF-invented mapping technology

    usf.edu

  • View organization page for Astrobotic, graphic

    39,661 followers

    Get ready for a celestial spectacle! The Perseid meteor shower is making its annual debut over the next few days, and it's set to be a dazzling show. Tomorrow should be peak viewing, with up to 100 meteors per hour streaking across the night sky. Best viewing time is after midnight, when the skies are darkest. Find a spot away from city lights, bring a blanket, and let the cosmic fireworks light up your night! Happy stargazing! Image Credit: Jeff Krugh - Lead Software Engineer, Astrobotic

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  • View organization page for Astrobotic, graphic

    39,661 followers

    Why STEM Education Matters: As students prep to go back to school this month, let's talk about the importance of quality STEM education - Science, Technology, Engineering and Math - to the future of the space industry. Innovation & Empowerment: STEM drives innovation, leading to groundbreaking technologies and solutions that tackle the world's biggest challenges and equips students with problem-solving skills and creativity, preparing them to become the leaders and innovators of tomorrow. Economic Growth & Critical Thinking: STEM careers are some of the fastest-growing and highest-paying, fueling economic growth and opportunities. STEM education fosters critical thinking skills, enabling students to approach complex problems with confidence and clarity. Global Challenges: From climate change to healthcare to the space industry, STEM fields are at the heart of addressing global issues, making a positive impact on communities worldwide. Image: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

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  • View organization page for Astrobotic, graphic

    39,661 followers

    Astrobotic has been selected by NASA for a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) award to develop an Extra Large Vertical Solar Array Technology (VSAT-XL) for the Moon. VSAT-XL's impressive size, 34m tall and 12.5m wide, would be the largest planned lunar power infrastructure technology to date to meet the growing energy demands on the lunar surface. This new array will build on the 10kW lunar VSAT already in development at Astrobotic under an existing NASA contract. VSAT-XL, like its smaller cousin, is a deployable, relocatable, self-leveling, sun-tracking solar powered system. However, it is designed to increase power output from 10 kW to 50 kW. https://buff.ly/3WAiSYO

  • View organization page for Astrobotic, graphic

    39,661 followers

    The more we study the Moon, the more we find out that it's, well, weird. Did you know, the Moon pulls on the Earth, causing our planet to be slightly egg-shaped? It affects water even more, creating tides and causing the oceans to pile up towards one side of the planet, forming a ‘tidal bulge’. So, while we experience tides as the water moving in and out, it's *actually* the Earth itself rotating into and out of this bulge. Image Credit: NASA/Vi Nguyen

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