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    Space Shuttle's Legacy: More Tech Spinoffs Than Apollo Era

    After years of development and decades of flying, the now-cancelled space shuttle program has left more to future generations than pieces for museums and fond memories of exploration.

    Its legacy lives on in an artificial heart device, NASCAR racing cars and rescue tools used to reach car accident victims. The entire array of NASA technology spinoffs could even be greater than the number of spinoffs from the Apollo moon missions.

    Whether or not the space shuttle program was worth its $209 billion price tag remains a separate debate for human spaceflight advocates and critics. But NASA's official count of tech spinoffs that went on to become commercial products suggests that many people on Earth have seen benefits from the shuttle's human spaceflight program.

    "People always think of NASA's heyday as the Apollo era, but the shuttle has produced about 50 percent more spinoffs than the Apollo era," said Daniel Lockney, technology transfer program executive at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C.[The 7 Best Space Apps for Your Phone]

     

    The shuttle spawned roughly 120 commercialized spinoffs, versus about 80 for the Apollo program, Lockney said. That's in part because the shuttle program ran for three decades as opposed to Apollo's one decade, but also because NASA created a more formalized system for spinning off innovations after the Apollo era.

    "NASA has gotten better at the transfer of technology from the launch pad to the laboratory to the public," Lockney told InnovationNewsDaily. "The shuttle program was a huge benefactor of that." [End of Shuttle Era Opens Doors for Robotic Space Exploration]

    One case emerged just as NASA was designing the space shuttle during the energy crisis of the 1970s. Per government request, the space agency tried redesigning boxy semi-trailer trucks to become more aerodynamic so that they could save on fuel. Shortly after NASA showed off its prototype design, the trucking industry chose to debut its own sleeker designs.

    "If you ask the trucking industry if it took these designs from NASA, you'll categorically get a no," Lockney said. "But a year or two after NASA's tour, you see a sea change in the industry."

    More recently, NASA supercomputers that had simulated fluid flow in shuttle rocket engines helped model the flow of blood in a tiny battery-powered heart pump just 2 inches long and 1 inch wide. The resulting changes led to the MicroMed DeBakey VAD device that keeps blood pumping through the hearts of ill patients awaiting heart transplants.

    Leftover rocket fuel from the space shuttle launches has gone into flare devices that disable or destroy land mines. And material that protects the space shuttle from the fierce heat of re-entry has helped protect NASCAR drivers from the engine heat of their racing cars.

    Even the explosive devices that separate the shuttle from its rocket boosters have become miniaturized for use in a more lightweight "Jaws of Life" device, a tool that rescue squads use to cut into car wrecks and reach accident victims.

    Could NASA have created similar spinoffs if it had gone with a spacecraft other than the shuttle? That's a tough alternate-reality question to answer, Lockney said. But he emphasized that any space spinoffs represent unexpected benefits from an agency with a focused mission.

    "It's important to recognize that these aren't the primary missions of NASA," Lockney said. "If you wanted to create a heart pump, building a rocket that will launch it into space wouldn't be the practical way to go about it."

    You can follow InnovationNewsDaily senior writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @ScienceHsu. Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @News_Innovation, or on Facebook.

     

    12 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      $207 Billion well spent on Americans and on American soil. Now let's talk about the Trillions wasted on foriegn wars we have no interest in.
    • John  •  10 mths ago
      Well we all know true R&D has 0% profit and it cost's huge amounts of money
      • Frank 10 mths ago
        Spoken like a true Luddite. Virtually all R&D has some impact somewhere. It may not be in the field in which it was originally intended, but most technological innovations of the past 30 years are either direct or indirect spin-offs of R&D by someone. Technology innovation doesn't generally spring forth unbound from brilliant minds, it is more often the result of years of trial and error by scientists and technicians in labs around the world.
      • philip d space 10 mths ago
        funny john - not

        if not for R&D -- you wouldn't be able to type your comment on the internet -- after all it was R&D that gave use first the transistor and then the microprocessor -- the core of every computer.
      • NathanS 10 mths ago
        You do realize that R&D is what has given us cars, planes, submarines and electricity. Also, not a biggie, 13 people on the mother****ing moon!
    • William William  •  10 mths ago
      Quantity is not better than quality. Apollo led to the innovation of a computer which probably equals all of the innovations that came out of the shuttle.
      • S 10 mths ago
        Actually the innovation of the computer began before WWII.
    • LAST CALL  •  10 mths ago
      well, thats all over with now. another great american legacy dead.
    • Rob  •  10 mths ago
      Now what? More robots?
    • John  •  10 mths ago
      Hey Last Call 1 Legacies don't DIE ok and 2 The next generation DON'T HAVE the BALL'S to step into the UNKNOWN
    • John  •  10 mths ago
      To DJ waaaahaha lmol like the saying goes I've seen them house flies and I've seen them horse flies heard of them flying elephant and them flying bricks Damm now them truck' flies Hell what next
      hat next
    • JetScreamer  •  10 mths ago
      Well I hope it would have made more, the Shuttle programme has been around for 30 years where Apollo was only around 8. When you compare the two, the shuttle did not make as many "spinoffs" as Apollo did ,comparatively speaking, during its programme duration. Plus Apollo had a clear and definite goal. The shuttle for a long time didn't.
      • S 10 mths ago
        Absolutely true.

        Also keep in mind that the *shuttle program* was one of the Apollo spin-offs...
    • DJ  •  10 mths ago
      Got to give them credit for making a truck fly? What happened to our base on the moon? All this and only $100 million+ a launch and the loss of two crews. How much did a Apollo launch cost us?
    • george  •  10 mths ago
      Don't know who writes this stuff but the Shuttle is Apollo era. The were working on the STS while we were on the moon, and the shuttle itself is hopelessly obsolete in every way, it has not pushed tech since the 1970s.
    • Micro .  •  10 mths ago
      We also know that the back engineering from the Roswell crash of 1947, which started it all is the real pay dirt for technology spinoffs. Of course people like Col. Philip Corso, in his book "The Day After Roswell", sheds light on how they seeded many corporations, but others have spoken since to back them up, like the several hundreds from the "Disclosure Project" run by Steven Greer. Shuttle related stuff is not top stuff. More to come.
    • Vladimir Jones  •  10 mths ago
      They estimate that the Space Shuttle program created 50% more spinoffs than Apollo? One should hope so, as Apollo lasted only about 15 years including early R&D time until Apollo-Soyuz. The Shuttle program has had over 40 years from development to end.
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