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Purpose and Scope
The Constellation University
Institutes Project (CUIP) is a consortium of approximately 20 universities
in the United States working a cooperative agreement with NASA to
focus on addressing the technical challenges of the NASA Constellation
Program. The CUIP’s technical portfolio
is comprised of the following key technical areas, or virtual institutes
(VIs):
- Thrust Chamber Assemblies (TCA)
- Propellant Storage and Delivery (PSD)
- Reentry Aerothermodynamics (RA)
- Structures and Materials for Extreme Environments (SMEE)
- Solids (SOL)
- Systems Engineering and Integration (SEI)
NASA’s Glenn Research Center is responsible for managing the
CUIP for the Constellation Program. NASA centers heavily involved
in Constellation applications within these technical areas collaborate
extensively with the university researchers at the task level. This
collaboration is integrated within the Constellation Program and occurs
for Constellation Program Level II Offices, the Crew Launch Vehicle
Project, the Crew Exploration Vehicle Project, the Lunar Lander Project,
and other Constellation Projects that are established over the course
of the program.
There are over 50 baselined task plans within the CUIP.
Our objectives
for this project are as follows:
1. Perform research and development that addresses critical Constellation
needs.
2. Enhance and broaden the ability of the nation’s universities
to meet the needs of NASA’s programs.
3. Expand the nation’s talent base for NASA mission-related
research and development and technology maturation.
4. Strengthen NASA’s ties to academia through long-term,
directed, and sustained investment.
Organization
The CUIP Management Team serves as the liaison or "courier" for
the project and its various entities, which are universities, the
government, and industry. While trying to position the tasks to best
meet the needs of Constellation, the Management Team strives to equip
each entity with the information required to optimize its efforts.
The
project organization encompasses six VIs which address problems of
fundamental importance to Constellation. The VIs all follow the same
format of having a lead NASA technical expert who helps guide the
research efforts from the various tasks within each VI, in addition
to at least one NASA point-of-contact per task (in most cases, there
are several NASA stakeholders per task as well). Within the CUIP,
there are 24 universities, 50 tasks, over 80 faculty members, and
100 students. Last year, the CUIP research team generated over 200
workshop, conference, and archival publications.
The University of
Maryland leads the CUIP from a management perspective.
For further
guidance, the project also relies on an Industry/Department of Defense
Advisory Board that includes NASA senior executive representatives.
The
graphic below illustrates the 24 universities together feeding into
the 6 VIs, representing a truly unified CUIP, which works to address
the challenges of Constellation.

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