Exact Contract Story
IGF::OT::IGF THIS SBIR PHASE-1 PROJECT WILL DEMONSTRATE THE FEASIBILITY OF AN INNOVATIVE BREAKTHROUGH IN ISRU METHODS THAT WE CALL "OPTICAL MINING". OPTICAL MINING IS AN APPROACH TO SIMULTANEOUSLY EXCAVATING CARBONACEOUS CHONDRITE ASTEROID SURFACES AND DRIVING WATER AND OTHER VOLATILES OUT OF THE EXCAVATED MATERIAL AND INTO AN ENCLOSING INFLATABLE BAG WITHOUT THE NEED FOR COMPLEX OR IMPRACTICAL ROBOTICS. IN OPTICAL MINING, HIGHLY CONCENTRATED SUNLIGHT IS DELIVERED TO THE SURFACE OF THE ASTEROID THROUGH A MECHANICALLY SIMPLE BUT OPTICALLY SOPHISTICATED SYSTEM OF REFLECTIVE NON-IMAGING OPTICS. THE HIGHLY CONCENTRATED OPTICAL ENERGY ABLATES THE SURFACE IN A CONTROLLED WAY ANALOGOUS TO HOW INTENSE LASERS CAN ABLATE SURFACES CONSTANTLY EXPOSING NEW MATERIAL AND FORCING WATER OUT OF THE ABLATED MATERIAL. OPTICAL MINING IS PART OF A MISSION CONCEPT THAT ICS ASSOCIATES HAS DEVELOPED CALLED APIS (ASTEROID PROVIDED IN-SITU SYSTEMS). APIS IS A COMMERCIALLY VIABLE APPROACH TO THE EXTRACTION, PROCESSING, AND DELIVERY OF WATER FROM ASTEROIDS TO IN-SPACE ASSETS. MISSION SYSTEM STUDIES SHOW THAT APIS CAN EXTRACT UP TO 100MT OF WATER FROM AN ACCESSIBLE NEAR EARTH ASTEROID AND DELIVER IT TO LUNAR DISTANT RETROGRADE ORBIT (LDRO) BASED ON THE LAUNCH OF JUST ONE MODEST SIZED SPACECRAFT FROM A SINGLE FALCON 9 ROCKET. THE APIS MISSION CONCEPT DEPENDS ON THE COMPLETION OF THE PROPOSED SBIR WORK. IN THIS PHASE-1 SBIR WE WILL DEVELOP A FACILITY TO SIMULATE AND DEMONSTRATE KEY ASPECTS OF OPTICAL MINING TO SHOW THE MISSION SYSTEM FEASIBILITY OF APIS AND PROVIDE A BREAKTHROUGH IN ISRU AND SPACE TRANSPORTATION FOR NASA. WE WILL DO THIS BY UPGRADING AN EXISTING XENON ARC LAMP AND VACUUM SYSTEM AND USING THE OPTICAL ENERGY FROM THE LAMP TO SIMULATE OPTICAL MINING ON ASTEROID MATERIALS IN VACUUM. WE WILL PERFORM EXPERIMENTS TO VALIDATE THE PROCESS BY OPTICALLY ABLATING THE SURFACES OF METEORITE SAMPLES AND ASTEROID SIMULATIONS UNDER CAREFULLY CONTROLLED AND OBSERVED CONDITIONS.
IGF::OT::IGF THIS SBIR PHASE-1 PROJECT WILL DEMONSTRATE THE FEASIBILITY OF AN INNOVATIVE BREAKTHROUGH IN ISRU METHODS THAT WE CALL "OPTICAL MINING". OPTICAL MINING IS AN APPROACH TO SIMULTANEOUSLY EXCAVATING CARBONACEOUS CHONDRITE ASTEROID SURFACES AND DRIVING WATER AND OTHER VOLATILES OUT OF THE EXCAVATED MATERIAL AND INTO AN ENCLOSING INFLATABLE BAG WITHOUT THE NEED FOR COMPLEX OR IMPRACTICAL ROBOTICS. IN OPTICAL MINING, HIGHLY CONCENTRATED SUNLIGHT IS DELIVERED TO THE SURFACE OF THE ASTEROID THROUGH A MECHANICALLY SIMPLE BUT OPTICALLY SOPHISTICATED SYSTEM OF REFLECTIVE NON-IMAGING OPTICS. THE HIGHLY CONCENTRATED OPTICAL ENERGY ABLATES THE SURFACE IN A CONTROLLED WAY ANALOGOUS TO HOW INTENSE LASERS CAN ABLATE SURFACES CONSTANTLY EXPOSING NEW MATERIAL AND FORCING WATER OUT OF THE ABLATED MATERIAL. OPTICAL MINING IS PART OF A MISSION CONCEPT THAT ICS ASSOCIATES HAS DEVELOPED CALLED APIS (ASTEROID PROVIDED IN-SITU SYSTEMS). APIS IS A COMMERCIALLY VIABLE APPROACH TO THE EXTRACTION, PROCESSING, AND DELIVERY OF WATER FROM ASTEROIDS TO IN-SPACE ASSETS. MISSION SYSTEM STUDIES SHOW THAT APIS CAN EXTRACT UP TO 100MT OF WATER FROM AN ACCESSIBLE NEAR EARTH ASTEROID AND DELIVER IT TO LUNAR DISTANT RETROGRADE ORBIT (LDRO) BASED ON THE LAUNCH OF JUST ONE MODEST SIZED SPACECRAFT FROM A SINGLE FALCON 9 ROCKET. THE APIS MISSION CONCEPT DEPENDS ON THE COMPLETION OF THE PROPOSED SBIR WORK. IN THIS PHASE-1 SBIR WE WILL DEVELOP A FACILITY TO SIMULATE AND DEMONSTRATE KEY ASPECTS OF OPTICAL MINING TO SHOW THE MISSION SYSTEM FEASIBILITY OF APIS AND PROVIDE A BREAKTHROUGH IN ISRU AND SPACE TRANSPORTATION FOR NASA. WE WILL DO THIS BY UPGRADING AN EXISTING XENON ARC LAMP AND VACUUM SYSTEM AND USING THE OPTICAL ENERGY FROM THE LAMP TO SIMULATE OPTICAL MINING ON ASTEROID MATERIALS IN VACUUM. WE WILL PERFORM EXPERIMENTS TO VALIDATE THE PROCESS BY OPTICALLY ABLATING THE SURFACES OF METEORITE SAMPLES AND ASTEROID SIMULATIONS UNDER CAREFULLY CONTROLLED AND OBSERVED CONDITIONS.
Discovery Data
- Mission
- Falcon 9
- Awarded on
- 2015-06-17
- Obligated amount
- $124,966
- Agency
- U.S. Government
- Customer
- U.S. Government
- Recipient
- INTEGRATED CONCURRENT SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES, INC.
- Actions
- 1
- Notices
- 0
- Spending points
- 1
- Bidders
- 0
- Exact source records
- 1
Links
Exact Source Evidence
Exact external records already attached to this contract story.
USASpending award
1 linkedNNX15CJ35P
Latest Award Actions
Mod 0 • 2015-06-17
Delta: $124,966 • Cumulative: $124,966
Spending Timeline
FY 2015 M06
Obligations: $124,966 • Outlays: N/A
Contract Detail FAQ
Search-first answers for this contract entity and its source identifiers.
- What sources feed the contract data on this site?
- Contract entities combine USAspending award references with SAM.gov-normalized procurement records (including PIID-linked actions, notices, and spending rows when available).
- Why is there a canonical /contracts URL when program pages already exist?
- Program pages keep mission context, while /contracts URLs consolidate duplicate contract entities into one indexable canonical URL so search engines attribute ranking signals to a single record.
- Which identifiers should I search to find a specific government contract?
- Use any of these identifiers: USAspending Award ID, PIID, contract key, solicitation ID, notice ID, recipient/awardee name, or agency/customer name.
- How often do contract pages update?
- Contract pages revalidate on a 10-minute cadence, while upstream source data refresh timing depends on ingest jobs and source-side publication timing.
- What is the difference between SAM.gov and USAspending in these records?
- USAspending primarily provides award and obligation visibility, while SAM.gov captures procurement lifecycle context such as solicitation notices and related action thread signals.
- Why can the contract amount differ from another source?
- Amounts can differ across snapshots because some sources report base award value while others include modification deltas, cumulative obligations, or later adjustments.
- Can one contract appear in more than one program section?
- Yes. A contract may appear in multiple program contexts; canonical entities are designed to consolidate those overlaps into a single URL for indexing and discovery.
- What is a PIID on a contract detail page?
- PIID stands for Procurement Instrument Identifier. It is the contracting identifier used to track related awards, actions, and notices across a procurement thread.
- Where should I verify the official source record for this contract?
- Use the Source record link on the contract detail page. The page also links back to the program-native detail page and, when available, the Artemis story page for thread context.
- Why are actions, notices, or spending rows sometimes missing?
- Missing rows usually mean no matched records were returned yet for that identifier set in the current source snapshot, not that the contract entity itself is invalid.
- What exact terms should I search to verify this specific contract?
- Use these identifiers in search: USASPENDING-NNX15CJ35P | NNX15CJ35P. Add terms like "USAspending", "SAM.gov", or the awardee name for faster exact matching.