NASA Installs Heat Shield on First Private Spacecraft Bound for Venus
Engineers at NASAβs Ames Research Center in Californiaβs Silicon Valley, Bohdan Wesely, right, and Eli Hiss, left, complete a fit check of the two halves of a space capsule that will study the clouds of Venus for signs of life.
Led by Rocket Lab of Long Beach, California, and their partners at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Rocket Labβs Venus missionΒ will be the first private mission to the planet.
NASAβs role is to help the commercial space endeavor succeed by providing expertise in thermal protection of small spacecraft. Invented at Ames, NASAβs Heatshield for Extreme Entry Environment Technology (HEEET) β the brown, textured material covering the bottom of the capsule in this photo β is a woven heat shield designed to protect spacecraft from temperatures up to 4,500 degrees Fahrenheit. The probe will deploy from Rocket Labβs Photon spacecraft bus, taking measurements as it descends through the planetβs atmosphere.
Teams at Ames work with private companies, like Rocket Lab, to turn NASA materials into solutions such as the heat shield tailor-made for this spacecraft destined for Venus, supporting growth of the new space economy. NASAβs Small Spacecraft Technology program, part of the agencyβs Space Technology Mission Directorate, supported development of the heat shield for Rocket Labβs Venus mission.