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NASA Technology Trends Market Survey

Closed
Prize:
$15 USD
Entries Received:
125
Contest bookmarked successfully!
NASA is interested in learning about the state of the art in three main areas and several specific sub-areas. The three main areas are: 
Safety in Advanced Air Mobility Vehicles
Lightweight Protection Against Radiation in Space
Revolutionary Sensors for Studying Atmospheres
NASA is looking for a review of current and emerging technologies, companies, universities, and existing publications relevant to the topics above. Your task is to identify this information and provide a thorough description of the source. 
To enter the Challenge, you must identify some relevant information, complete the Submission Form with all the required information, and upload a PDF image of the Form to the Challenge Page. To learn more about what NASA is looking for in each area, please read through the Background Information section below. Also, read How to Enter and Submit your solution and be sure you understand the Rules of the Challenge. 
The work you identify may or may not be in aerospace but it must apply to one of these three areas of interest. 
Background Information and Areas/Sub-areas of Interest:
The following is some background about each of the areas of interest. 
Safety in Advanced Air Mobility Vehicles 
AAMs are a new type of aircraft that run on electric power and use vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) capabilities. NASA wants to improve the safety of pilots and passengers in these new and emerging aircraft designs. NASA is also looking for technologies that monitor and ensure the health of the aircraft and the people inside. The ideal innovations would use novel technologies, human-computer teamwork, and health monitoring systems NASA doesn't have yet.
Specific subtopics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Ways to monitor the vehicle’s structure and health
Ways to keep new and emerging aircraft safe while in operation
Innovations in technology, humans and machines working and thinking together, and passenger health.
Lightweight Protection Against Radiation in Space
Galactic cosmic rays, particles from solar flares, and those trapped in Earth's magnetic field pose significant challenges including potential health risks, such as cancer and degenerative diseases. Space travel is rapidly progressing to include traveling to Mars or establishing habitats on the Moon, the need for lightweight, effective protection against these cosmic rays becomes paramount. We're in search of solutions that not only shield against these rays but also address the challenges of long-duration space travel and extraterrestrial stays.
As NASA looks toward the future of space travel, people will be traveling longer distances and staying in space longer. Radiation poses a major health risk to astronauts, including risks of cancer and other diseases. The radiation in space comes from galactic cosmic rays, particles from solar flares, and radiation trapped in Earth's magnetic field. To help protect the astronauts, NASA is looking for lightweight radiation shields that block the harmful rays that can impact an astronaut’s health.
Specific subtopics of interest include, but are not limited to protection in the following situations:
Long-term habitats on the Moon
Long-term habitats on Mars
Habitats on other planets, asteroids, comets, or other extraterrestrial bodies 
Dormancy (defined as the time in transit to and from extraterrestrial bodies)
Revolutionary Sensors for Studying Atmospheres
NASA is looking for cutting-edge sensors that can elevate our understanding of the universe. Whether it's on Earth or distant planets, atmospheric characterization is crucial. NASA is interested in sensor technologies that harness the power of quantum sensing, metamaterials, freeform optics, and advanced detector technologies. 
NASA wants to develop new and better sensors to study the atmospheres of Earth and other planets. By using cutting-edge technologies such as quantum sensing, advanced materials, improved optics, and better detectors NASA hopes to revolutionize their ability to characterize atmospheres everywhere. Sensors that combine some of these technologies in new ways could give NASA a much deeper understanding of atmospheres and their gases, temperature, moisture, and other qualities. This would lead to major discoveries about atmospheres on our planet and others.
Specific subtopics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Quantum sensing
New metamaterials and metasurfaces
Freeform optics
New and advanced detectors and other technologies
Combinations of these new technologies
NASA is not looking for you to solve these problems.  What NASA is looking for is a review of current and emerging technologies, companies, universities, and existing publications relevant to the topics above.  In particular, finding work in other fields (not aerospace) that might apply to aerospace would be very valuable to NASA. 
How to Enter
You must have a Freelancer Account.
You must meet the eligibility requirements.
Complete all required fields in the submission form - https://forms.gle/1zymkPvmnomuGMVf8
Upload a PDF copy of your submission form to the Challenge Page as your entry to the competition.
Submissions
You may submit as many entries as you want. However, each one must provide unique information (e.g., unique organization or unique product). Incomplete entries or entries that do not meet the eligibility requirements will be disqualified.
Submissions must be uploaded to the Challenge page before the deadline, December 8, 2023, at 11:59 p.m. ET. No late submissions will be accepted.
All submissions must be in PDF format, in English, and machine-readable (not handwritten).
For a submission to be considered it must be:
Written in English
Complete. Submission must include:
The topic/subtopic your research applies to.
A description of the information you found and how it applies to one or more of the areas of interest. (50-100 words required length). 
URLs that point directly to the cited information. You may include multiple URLs but they all must be related to the research. For each URL you must provide:
Link
Title of the webpage
Short description of the page
What type of site it is: 
University or company site
You must link directly to the page describing the work you’ve cited.
A published paper
You must provide the title of the paper, the abstract, and the citation.
An article or summary piece
Provide the title of the article, author, and original publication information. 
For original information (e.g., author website), provide the author and affiliation, if available.
Verifiable: We must be able to go to the URLs and check that the description matches what is on the website and addresses the challenge requirements. 
Your submission may include one uploaded file summarizing your submission if you need additional space beyond the 50-100 words. The file must be saved as a PDF and may not contain any links not provided elsewhere. 
Submission will not be considered if:
They only reference NASA’s work
They contain resumes or have URLs that point to Freelancer.com, Facebook, LinkedIn, or any other personal site.
Are self-promoting, asking for work, or claiming that you have your own solution.
The content is completely AI-generated. You may use AI to help with your research but you must provide sources for all referenced information and your description may not be AI-generated.
Multiple sources are combined into one document; we must be able to verify each link and each source.
The source has already been identified and documented. 
The solution includes proprietary components or anything that requires licensing.
To check if your source has already been identified, please use the URL Checker - https://app.box.com/s/etpiqp0cbav2ej3vyo4lgehttnyg43xs. We aim to keep the information up to date, but we cannot guarantee the results. 
Here is an example of a submission that is completed correctly and with useful information. 
Topic: Innovative Lightweight Protection against Galactic Cosmic Rays
Subtopic: Long-term habitats on Mars
Description: This paper describes how a space shield might protect astronauts, inhabitants of Mars or the moon, or spacecraft from cosmic rays. The paper discusses the theoretical creation of an artificial ozone layer in the stratosphere using powerful microwaves. 
Type of website: Published paper
URL:  https://www.researchgate.net/publication/222720798_Artificial_ozone_layer
Title of the Paper: Artificial ozone layer
Abstract: The possibility of artificial ozone layer creation in the stratosphere by powerful microwaves is discussed theoretically. Numerical calculations and analytical results for a simple oxygen model are presented.
Citation: Gurevich, A.V. & Borisov, Nikolay & Montecinos, Sonia & Hartogs, P.. (1995). Artificial ozone layer. Physics Letters A. 207. 281-288. 10.1016/0375-9601(95)00690-5.
Prizes
The first 100 submissions that meet all the criteria and provide valuable information to help with the research project with be awarded $15. Once we have either reached the deadline of December 8, 2023, or received 100 submissions that meet the criteria, whichever comes first, the challenge will close. 
Rules:
NASA and Blue Clarity LLC reserve the right to cancel, suspend, and/or modify the challenge, or any part of it for any reason. Updated materials will be made available to all participants.
Eligibility Requirements:
By participating in a Freelancer.com contest, each participant (whether an individual, group of individuals, or entity) must agree to and abide by the following: Freelancer Eligibility Policies, Freelancer User Agreement, and the Freelancer Copyright Infringement Policy. Each participant must complete and comply with the Freelancer KYC process. All team members must meet Freelancer eligibility policies.
All team members must be at least 18 years old and must be eligible to receive payment under the laws of the United States.
United States federal sanctions prohibit participation from Cuba, Iran, Sudan, Burma, and North Korea. 
The Challenge Team and partners are not eligible to participate. Federal employees acting within the scope of their employment are not eligible to participate. Any individual or entity associated with the development or administration of this challenge is ineligible to compete. Government contractors working on the same or similar projects are ineligible to participate in the Challenge.
Funds from U.S. or foreign government organizations should not be used to directly fund the development of a solution to this Challenge. Solutions that were previously developed with Government/Federal funds, or where Government/Federal funds, including but not limited to, employee time, materials, and reviews, were utilized to prepare the submission or solutions are prohibited.
Payment:
For any prize award, the winner will receive the full amount awarded; any Freelancer seller fee will be refunded to the winner.
If participating as a team, all payments will be made to the Team Leader who is solely responsible for the distribution of funds among team members.
Intellectual Property
The winning participants will transfer all intellectual property rights to @poweredbyFLN when awarded the prizes.
The Government reserves the right to negotiate licenses for additional submitted solutions.
General Conditions
You agree to the terms set forth herein and to all decisions of NASA and Challenge Partners, which are final and binding in all respects.
Scores from the judging panel will not be shared with the Competitors.
Please submit your questions to the Challenge’s Public Clarification Board.
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Skills Required

Aerospace Engineering
Data Entry
Data Processing
Excel
Research

Accepted File Formats

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Clarification Board
No spam, self-promotion or advertisement is permitted.

User Avatar
Sudip S.
·
4 months ago
Is still awarding remaining?
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Sudip S.
·
5 months ago
Today this contest show closed. Is still awarding remaining? What about my entry?
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Contest Holder
·
6 months ago
Hello Dear Participants, We are closing the challenge as we received 100 submissions that meet the criteria. We will start awarding the winners next week.
User Avatar
Sudip S.
·
6 months ago
Name of PDF? I put my freelancer's name
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Sudip S.
·
6 months ago
$15 is for 1 or the whole 100?
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Amir S.
·
6 months ago
where is $10 each applicant of last contest?
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Jakson R.
·
6 months ago
Hi, can people from Brazil participate?

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