Redwire's Trailblazing OSAM-2 Mission Passes Critical NASA Milestone
Redwire Corporation (NYSE: RDW) has successfully passed the Mission Critical Design Review (CDR) for its On-Orbit Servicing, Assembly and Manufacturing 2 (OSAM-2) mission, marking a significant milestone in developing robotic technologies for constructing large structures in space. This $73.7 million contract with NASA, signed in 2019, allows Redwire to advance into building and verifying flight hardware. OSAM-2 is set to demonstrate 3D printing and robotic assembly capabilities in orbit, crucial for future space infrastructure advancements and potential applications on the Moon and Mars.
- Successful completion of the Mission Critical Design Review (CDR) for OSAM-2, signaling progress in project development.
- $73.7 million contract with NASA enhances Redwire's position in the space industry.
- OSAM-2's technology demonstration could revolutionize space construction and reduce future mission costs.
- None.
"We are proud to have accomplished this critical program milestone for the OSAM-2 mission and to move one step closer to launching this game-changing technology,” said
OSAM-2 is leveraging Redwire’s Archinaut platform, a customizable suite of manufacturing and assembly technology that can be integrated into free-flying satellites. OSAM-2 will use additive manufacturing technology, also known as 3D printing, and a robotic arm to build and manipulate structures and tools in space, demonstrating critical technologies for producing space infrastructure. After launch, the refrigerator-sized OSAM-2 spacecraft will build and deploy a surrogate solar array in orbit. OSAM-2 will 3D print one beam that extends 10 meters from one side of the spacecraft and a second one that extends six meters from the other side. The Archinaut technologies that OSAM-2 demonstrates have the potential to enable construction of structures that are larger and lighter than what could be launched to orbit by any currently operational rocket.
The OSAM-2 Mission CDR is the latest in a series of milestones for the project.
After completing the CDR, OSAM-2 moves into the Assembly, Integration and Test phase of the project. This summer, engineers will conduct tests of the engineering design units and build spacecraft flight hardware. OSAM-2 will then go through environmental testing, payload integration and verification before moving on to its final preparations before launch.
Once launched, OSAM-2 will demonstrate the feasibility of using 3D printing to produce space infrastructure. Such capabilities could be used to build large structures in orbit like antennae, solar arrays and space telescopes. The technology can also be applied on the surface of the Moon or Mars to build habitats and other facilities. These capabilities could play an important role in NASA’s return to the Moon with the Artemis missions. The technology could also reduce the need for spacewalks to build structures. This capability could result in reduced risk and cost savings as humanity returns to the Moon and pushes out farther into the solar system.
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