Lockheed Martin has unveiled a spaceflight architecture that it says could take cargo to the International Space Station and help facilitate humanity's spread out into the solar system.
Lockheed hopes the system — which features a space tug known as Jupiter and a supply module called Exoliner — wins a NASA contract for the next round of cargo missions to the space station, which would commence in 2018. But the company's ambitions extend far beyond low Earth orbit, to destinations such as the moon and Mars. Lockheed unveiled the project, along with a video animation of how Jupiter and Exoliner would work, on Thursday.
Two American companies — Orbital ATK and SpaceX — currently resupply the space station for NASA under separate billion-dollar contracts. Last year, the space agency solicited proposals for a new round of private cargo delivery, called Commercial Resupply Services 2, or CRS-2.
Lockheed won't be the only competition that Orbital ATK and SpaceX will face in this next round: Boeing and Sierra Nevada also have thrown their hats into the CRS-2 ring. NASA is expected to make its decision this June.
If Lockheed Martin's entry is selected, the company's first operational mission would launch Jupiter and an Exoliner toward the space station aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket. The Exoliner is designed to be disposable: After unloading the Exoliner, astronauts on the station would fill the vessel with trash and send it to burn up in Earth's atmosphere.
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