New UK
funding for space technology projects
21 November
2023
The Enabling
Technologies Programme (ETP) provides opportunities
for the UK space sector to accelerate the
development of leading-edge technologies that could
be used to tackle global problems and benefit the
work of space organisations internationally.
The total
government funding is £4 million - made up of £3.2
million from the UK Space Agency with £800,000
contributed by the Science and Technology Facilities
Council (STFC), part of UK Research and Innovation
(UKRI).
The projects
from academia and industry explore how space can be
used more efficiently for purposes such as weather
prediction, climate-change monitoring, and space
debris removal through methods of propulsion,
sterilisation, in-orbit servicing, imaging, and
more.
Dr
Paul Bate, CEO of the UK Space Agency, said:
Space science and technology has never been
more important to life on Earth. The Enabling
Technologies Programme demonstrates how our work at
the UK Space Agency is empowering scientists and
engineers in universities, companies and research
institutes to develop new capabilities and advance
the technologies of tomorrow. From the use of space
data for weather predication and flood monitoring,
to new methods of propulsion and in-orbit servicing,
these new projects are great examples of how we can
harness the power of space to protect our planet and
people.
One project
from the University of Glasgow explores how a
spacecraft can consume its own body as fuel – to
support scalable, cost-effective low Earth orbit
access.
Meanwhile,
the University of Bristol looks at use of data from
the UK-backed Surface Water and Ocean Topography
(SWOT) mission, targeting an order or magnitude
improvement in accuracy for global flood modelling.
Another, run
by Oxford Dynamics looks at how a long-range radar
system could detect objects in low Earth orbit to
support space debris mitigation operations.
Professor Grahame Blair, STFC Executive Director,
Programmes, said:
We are living through an
incredibly exciting time for the UK space industry.
Thanks to initiatives such as the Enabling
Technologies Programme, our space scientists are
continually pushing the frontiers of Earth
observation, satellite communications, and even
manned space exploration, with untold benefits to
society. STFC is proud to partner with the UK Space
Agency to support the UK space science community and
help solidify the UK’s position as a world leader in
the space economy.
Support from
the ETP fund is key to addressing project barriers
in research and development, bringing high value
space technologies to market that can create jobs
and benefit people, businesses and communities for
generations to come.
Projects
University
of Southampton (£201,000) – Development of a
sterilisation method using non-thermal plasma to
support human spaceflight and exploration.
University
of Southampton (£102,000) – Development of
Raman-spectroscopy (which uses scattered light to
measure vibrational energy of samples) for detecting
low level biosignatures (substance that provide
evidence of life), which will particularly support
exploration of icy worlds, including the Moon and
Mars.
Fraunhofer
Centre for Applied Photonics, UK (£240,000) –
Development of a low SWaP light detection and
ranging method (LiDAR) instrument that can be
mounted onto unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to
support Earth observation.
Fraunhofer
Centre for Applied Photonics, UK (£247,000) –
Development of low cost, room temperature photon
counting detectors that can be used in imaging,
sensing and optical communications.
University
of Manchester (£190,000) – Development of
alternative motion techniques that expand the range
and operating capabilities for extra-terrestrial
robotics, supporting future rover and exploration
missions.
Imperial
College London (£144,000) – Development of a new
approach for magnetometer systems that reduces the
need for booms on a spacecraft, helping to lower the
cost of space science missions.
MDA Space
and Robotics (£147,000)– Development of a novel
laser sensor to make complex, vision-based missions
possible in poor illumination conditions.
RAL Space
(£233,000) – Development of a highly stabilised
laser which can be used in low Earth orbit to
support space weather measurement.
MDA Space
and Robotics UK (£141,000) – Development of
short-range, rotating LiDAR, more efficient in terms
of size, weight and power, that can be used in
planetary surface robotics.
Surrey Space
Centre, University of Surrey (£250,000) –
Development of a detector for high energy particles
that can be used in solar or cosmic ray missions and
to enhance space weather predictions.
University
of Birmingham (£250,000) – Development of a new
operational and technical capability to assess the
state and condition of satellites from orbit using
sub-THz radar imagery, supporting in-orbit service
capabilities.
University
of Leicester (£183,000) – Development of sample
return instrument boxes and portable sample
containers to support rover and sample return
missions.
Durham
University (£159,000) – Development of a solar
polarimeter (optical instrument used to determine
polarisation of light samples) that can be
wavelength-tuned to measure the solar magnetic field
over several hundred kilometres depth within the
second layer of the Sun’s atmosphere.
University
of Hertfordshire (£100,000) – Project to
substantially increase the dynamic range of
complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)
imaging sensors to support astronomy, in
collaboration with XCAM and the Open University.
University
of Glasgow (£250,000) – Additive manufacturing
material and process testing in a simulated space
environment, enabling rapid, sustainable and
cost-effective component qualification.
University
of Glasgow (£290,000) – Pilot scale testing of an
autophage (self-consuming) propulsion system –
whereby the spacecraft consumes its own body as fuel
– which supports scalable, cost-effective low Earth
orbit access.
Teer
Coatings Ltd (£124,000) – Development of a novel
bimetallic doped, thin-film MoS2 solid lubricant
with long lifetime, low friction coefficient and
stability under atmospheric conditions. An enabling
technology for long duration missions.
Oxford
Dynamics (£194,000) – Development of a long-range
radar system capable of detecting objects in low
Earth orbit, which could support space debris
mitigation operations.
Newton
Launch Systems (£194,000) – Development of a nitrous
oxide monopropellant thruster using induction
heating as the trigger, with the aim of providing a
solution to end-of-life satellite disposal.
University
of Bristol (£206,000) – Use of data from NASA’s
UK-backed Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT)
mission to improve order of magnitude accuracy for
global flood modelling.
Orbit Fab
(£228,000) – Development of an in-orbit refuelling
interface, using a grasping technique, to enhance
satellite servicing solutions that support
sustainable space operations.
University
of Strathclyde (£250,000) – Development of a
technique combining hyperspectral technology
(imagine using a wide electromagnetic spectrum) with
machine learning to determine the movement of space
objects, with could support active debris removal
operations.
GMV
(£250,000) – Development of a novel distributed
simulation environment using a robotic testbed with
digital twins and cutting-edge extended reality to
verify and validate IOSM operations. An enabling
technology for in orbit refuelling and satellite
servicing.
Space for
Our Future: UK aims to join Atlantic Constellation
with funding for new Earth observation satellite
The UK is
aiming to join Portugal and Spain as a member of the
Atlantic Constellation and is contributing a new
pathfinder satellite designed and built by a
UK-based company adding to the innovative Earth and
coastal monitoring and data sharing network.
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