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Our Current Projects

Current STAC Projects

High Altitude Balloon

Project led by Gabi Directo and Aaron Lin

While low Earth orbit continues to become more accessible, a tremendous amount of science can still be done in the stratosphere. For the past two years, STAC’s High Altitude Balloon (HAB) program has melded custom hardware with off-the-shelf parts to lift payloads to 100,000 feet—all at less than $2000 per launch. Such an altitude is perfect for certain astrobiology and atmospheric experiments; STAC has launched payloads for the NASA Ames Research Center and for Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

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TIME II

Project led by Chelsea Fang

If humanity is to establish a permanent presence throughout the Solar System, we must better understand the effects of microgravity on human health and disease prevention. The second iteration of The Interstellar Microgravity Experiment (TIME II) aims to characterize these effects. The TIME II payload will experience two minutes of microgravity on a suborbital Blue Origin flight, during which it will expose a series of microfluidic E. coli cultures to the antibiotic gentamicin. Through detailed laboratory analysis of the E. coli’s RNA expression, we will determine the impact of microgravity on antibiotic efficacy, thereby gaining valuable insight towards keeping astronauts healthy.

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QubeSat

Project led by Vidish Gupta

STAC’s Quantum CubeSat (QubeSat) aims to demonstrate the capabilities of emerging quantum technologies in space operations. The QubeSat will carry as its payload a quantum gyroscope, a novel device developed by UC Berkeley’s Department of Physics, which harnesses nitrogen vacancies in diamond in order to provide attitude control. If successfully demonstrated in low Earth orbit, the gyroscope—which is orders of magnitude smaller and more accurate than traditional mechanical alternatives—has the potential to revolutionalize sensor technology for CubeSats, WaferSat constellations, and the other microsatellites of the NewSpace era.

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Lunar Autonomous Rover

Project led by Amol Pant

Machine learning and artificial intelligence have a big role to play in the NewSpace era. The goal of STAC’s AI Rover project is to develop the algorithms and training simulations to teach mining rovers to autonomously navigate the lunar surface. Through the use of machine vision, SLAM, and CNNs, such rovers would be able to operate with minimal human oversight, dramatically increasing the efficiency, scalability, and affordability of in-situ extraterrestrial resource acquisition.

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Lunar Resource Rover

Project led by Levi Evans and Peter Connors

Recent discoveries by NASA conclusively demonstrated that there’s water on the Moon—and a lot of it. STAC’s Mechanical/Resource Rover project aims to develop a mining rover that can endure the harsh conditions of the Moon’s Permanently-Shadowed Regions (PSRs) in order to access this water. Once extracted, this water will both supply self-sufficient lunar outposts and be electrolyzed into rocket fuel to enable the further exploration of the Solar System.

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