BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

Entering the self-assembling era in space

Swathi Mohan, an Indian-born NASA engineer, says space infra should cross the ‘valley of death’ to become reality

- M Ramesh BIJOY GHOSH

Can you imagine rocketing up the components of a large telescope or a solar power plant and having them all assemble themselves into the telescope or the solar plant in space?

Sounds like science fiction stuff, but it is not. Spacebased infrastruc­ture is not basic research anymore, but something that has all signs of becoming reality.

Ask Swati Mohan, the NASA engineer, whose historic words, “touchdown confirmed” announced to the world the successful landing of the Perseveran­ce rover on the surface of Mars, on February 18, 2021. She was the ‘Guidance, Navigation and controls operations Lead’ for NASA’s Perseveran­ce Mars rover mission, and is currently working on the ‘Mars sample return programme’.

So, Dr Mohan should know a thing or two about spacebased infrastruc­ture as ‘autonomous assembly of space telescopes’ was the subject of her doctoral thesis at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, US.

The 41yearold, Bengalurub­orn, USraised scientist, who loves wearing a bindi —calls herself a “practicing Hindu” and believes that “we as people cannot know everything and the mystery of it inspires me and keeps me humble”— was inspired into ‘space’ by Star Trek as a child. As a schoolgoer, she won an internship with the institutio­n where her destiny would take her years later — NASA. Her conversati­on with businessli­ne got to the question of whether selfassemb­ly of space telescopes (and other infrastruc­ture like space solar stations) are mature technologi­es or not.

“It is not basic research anymore,” she said, but “it is not high enough that a mission will accept it,

Swati Mohan, NASA scientist

because it is risky.”

In the ‘technology readiness level’ scale (where TRL1 is a concept and TRL9 is a marketread­y product), “the middle portion is called the ‘valley of death’,” Dr Mohan explained. One can build prototypes and do labbased demonstrat­ions, but to demonstrat­e it in space (or in an environmen­t relevant to the product) is very difficult, she said. (Dr Mohan has earlier spoken about the US ‘OpTIIX mission, for the first telescope assembled in flight’, which was given up “due to various reasons”.) Spacebased infrastruc­ture is yet to cross the ‘valley of death’, she said.

“We have a lot of different techniques” for autonomous assembly of a telescope (or any other space infrastruc­ture) she said, stressing that “it is not as simple as declaring whether the technology is mature or not. I think we will eventually get there, but it requires a little bit more coordinate­d thought and planning.”

Pertinent to note that the Russian President Vladimir Putin has just said that Russia would put up a nuclear power plant in space. (Spacebased power stations, whether solar or nuclear, would convert electricit­y into microwaves and beam them to earth, where it is reconverte­d into electricit­y.)

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