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An Interim Report on NASA's Draft Space Technology Roadmaps (2011)

Chapter: Appendix A: Statement of Task

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Statement of Task." National Research Council. 2011. An Interim Report on NASA's Draft Space Technology Roadmaps. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/13228.
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A
Statement of Task

The NRC will appoint a steering committee and [six] panels to solicit external inputs to and evaluate the 14 draft technology roadmaps that NASA has developed as a point of departure. The steering committee will also provide recommendations that identify and prioritize key technologies. The scope of the technologies to be considered includes those that address the needs of NASA’s exploration systems, Earth and space science, and space operations mission areas, as well as those that contribute to critical national and commercial needs in space technology. (This study will not consider aeronautics technologies except to the extent that they are needed to achieve NASA and national needs in space; guidance on the development of core aeronautics technologies is already available in the National Aeronautics Research and Development Plan.)

The steering committee and panels will prepare two reports, as follows:

•   The steering committee will establish a set of criteria to enable prioritization of technologies within each and among all of the technology areas that the NASA technology roadmaps should satisfy.

•   Each panel will conduct a workshop focused on one or more roadmaps, as assigned, to solicit feedback and commentary from industry, academia, and government on the 14 draft roadmaps provided by NASA at the initiation of the study.

•   Based on the results of the community input and its own deliberations, the steering committee will prepare a brief interim report that addresses high-level issues associated with the roadmaps, such as the advisability of modifying the number or technical focus of the draft NASA roadmaps.

•   Each panel will meet individually to suggest improvements to the roadmaps in areas such as:

—   The identification of technology gaps,

—   The identification of technologies not covered in the draft roadmaps,

—   Development and schedule changes of the technologies covered,

—   A sense of the value (such as potential to reduce mass and/or volume, number of missions it could support, new science enabled, facility to operate, terrestrial benefit) for key technologies,

—   The risk, or reasonableness, of the technology line items in the NASA technology roadmaps, and

—   The prioritization of the technologies within each roadmap by groups such as high, medium, or low priority; this prioritization should be accomplished, in part, via application of relevant criteria described above in a uniform manner across panels.

•   Each panel will prepare a written summary of the above for the steering committee

•   The steering committee will subsequently develop a comprehensive final report that

—   Summarizes findings and recommendations for each of the 14 roadmaps

—   Integrates the outputs from the workshops and panels to identify key common threads and issues

—   Prioritizes, by group, the highest-priority technologies from all 14 roadmaps

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Statement of Task." National Research Council. 2011. An Interim Report on NASA's Draft Space Technology Roadmaps. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/13228.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Statement of Task." National Research Council. 2011. An Interim Report on NASA's Draft Space Technology Roadmaps. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/13228.
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Page 35
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Statement of Task." National Research Council. 2011. An Interim Report on NASA's Draft Space Technology Roadmaps. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/13228.
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Page 36
Next: Appendix B: Workshops and Public Input »
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For the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to achieve many of its space science and exploration goals over the next several decades, dramatic advances in space technology will be necessary. NASA has developed a set of 14 draft roadmaps to guide the development of such technologies under the leadership of the NASA Office of the Chief Technologist (OCT). Each roadmap focuses on a particular technology area.

OCT requested that the National Research Council conduct a study to review the draft roadmaps, gather and assess relevant community input, and make recommendations and suggest priorities to inform NASA's decisions as it finalizes its roadmaps. The success of OCT's technology development program is essential, because technological breakthroughs have long been the foundation of NASA's successes, from its earliest days, to the Apollo program, to a vast array of space science missions and the International Space Station.

An Interim Report of NASA's Technology Roadmap identifies some gaps in the technologies included in the individual roadmaps. The report suggests that the effectiveness of the NASA space technology program can be enhanced by employing proven management practices and principles including increasing program stability, addressing facility issues, and supporting adequate flight tests of new technologies. This interim report provides several additional observations that will be expanded on in the final report to be released in 2012.

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