Early-stage funding and support is available to companies through the Small Business Innovation Research program.

WASHINGTON—New space technology ideas emerge frequently from innovators across the country. Recognizing this, NASA’s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program offers small businesses in the United States early-stage funding and support to advance the agency’s goals of exploring the unknown in air and space while returning benefits to Earth. The SBIR program recently selected more than 100 projects for funding, according to a release from NASA.

Specifically, the program awarded $93.5 million in Phase II contracts to bring 107 new ideas to life from 95 selected small businesses. Of these businesses, nearly 80 percent have less than 50 employees, and 21 percent are receiving their first Phase II award, valued at up to $850,000 each. Each small business was also eligible to apply for up to $50,000 in Technical and Business Assistance program funding to help find new market opportunities and shape their commercialization roadmap, the release said.

“We are thrilled to support this diverse set of companies as they work diligently to bring their technologies to market,” said Jenn Gustetic, director of Early Stage Innovation and Partnerships with NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, in the release. “Inclusive innovation is integral to mission success at NASA, and we’re excited to see that 29 percent of the awardees are from underrepresented groups, including 11 percent women-owned businesses.”

In Phase II, awardees will build on their success from the program’s first phase to bring their technologies closer to real-world use. The companies have 24 months to execute their plans, which focus on their technologies’ path to commercialization.

In one example, NASA selected women-owned and first-time NASA Phase II awardee nou Systems, Inc., in Huntsville, Alabama, for its genetic testing instrument. Although portable genetic sequencing already exists, field sequencing—which would allow DNA analysis anywhere on Earth or off planet—remains unfeasible. The preparation of the DNA Library remains an intensely manual process, requiring a trained wet lab technician and several pieces of laboratory equipment.

The Phase II technology takes advantage of several cross-enabling technologies, creating an instrument to automate the genetic sequencing process, according to the release.

“Our program works directly with small businesses to forge innovative concepts and technologies that drive impact for NASA projects, as well as a myriad of commercial endeavors,” said Jason L. Kessler, program executive for NASA’s SBIR and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program at NASA Headquarters, in the release. “This collaboration results in realized opportunities not only for NASA but all of humanity.”

Another example includes technologies aiming to reduce astronaut workload and improve robotic scientific endeavors on the Moon and Mars.

PickNik Inc., based in Boulder, Colorado, will use its Phase II award to continue developing a hardware-agnostic platform for supervised autonomy that empowers humans to command a remote robot to complete complex tasks with minimal input, which could support the Artemis program. Outside of NASA, PickNik’s software product may be of interest to commercial space customers working on low Earth orbit destinations, in-space servicing, and on Earth in areas like warehouse management, oil rig maintenance, and deep-sea exploration, NASA said in the release.

The NASA SBIR program is open to U.S. small businesses to develop an innovation or technology. The program is part of STMD and managed by NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley. More information about the NASA SBIR program is available at

https://sbir.nasa.gov.