NASA Cloud Software Helps Companies Find their Place in Space  ...Middle East

NASA - News
NASA Cloud Software Helps Companies Find their Place in Space 

2 min read

Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater) The Double Asteroid Redirection Test required extreme precision in mission planning to achieve its mission of impacting an asteroid. The founders of Continuum Space worked on astrodynamics relating to this mission, which they used to inform their product.NASA

Planning space missions is a very involved process, ensuring orbits are lined up and spacecraft have enough fuel is imperative to the long-term survival of orbital assets. Continuum Space Systems Inc. of Pasadena, California, produces a cloud-based platform that gives mission planners everything they need to certify that their space resources can accomplish their goals. 

    Continuum’s story begins at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. Loic Chappaz, the company’s co-founder, started at JPL as an intern working on astrodynamics related to NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test. There he met Leon Alkalai, a JPL technical fellow who spent his 30-year career at the center planning deep space missions. After Alkalai retired from NASA, he founded Mandala Space Ventures, a startup that explored several avenues of commercial space development. Chappaz soon became Mandala’s first employee, but to plan their future, Mandala’s leadership began thinking about the act of planning itself. 

    Because the staff had decades of combined experience at JPL, they knew the center had the building blocks for the software they needed. After licensing several pieces of software from JPL, the company began building planning systems that were highly adaptable to any space mission they could come up with. Mandala eventually evolved into a venture firm that incubated space-related startups. However, because Mandala had invested considerably in developing mission-planning tools, further development could be performed by a new company, and Continuum was fully spun off from Mandala in 2021. 

    Continuum’s platform includes several features for mission planners, such as plotting orbital maneuvers and risk management evaluations. Some of these are built upon software licensed from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.Continuum Space Systems Inc.

    Continuum’s tools are designed to take a space mission from concept to completion. There are three different components to their “mission in a box” — design, build and test, and mission operations. The base of these tools are several pieces of software developed at NASA. As of 2024, several space startups have begun planning missions with Continuum’s NASA-inspired software, as well as established operators of satellite constellations. From Continuum to several startups, NASA technologies continue to prove a valuable foundation for the nation’s space economy.  

    Read More

    Share

    Details

    Last Updated Mar 25, 2025

    Related Terms

    Technology Transfer & SpinoffsSpinoffsTechnology Transfer

    Explore More

    2 min read

    NASA Expertise Helps Record all the Buzz

    Article 2 weeks ago 2 min read

    What is a NASA Spinoff? We Asked a NASA Expert: Episode 53

    Article 3 weeks ago 3 min read

    NASA Partners with US Patent and Trademark Office to Advance Technology Transfer

    Article 3 months ago Keep Exploring

    Discover Related Topics

    Planetary Defense – DART

    NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART), built and managed by the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) for NASA’s Planetary…

    Jet Propulsion Laboratory – News

    Science Missions

    Solar System

    Read More Details
    Finally We wish PressBee provided you with enough information of ( NASA Cloud Software Helps Companies Find their Place in Space  )

    Also on site :