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NASA Awards Launch Service Task Order for Aspera's Galaxy Mission
NASA Awards Launch Service Task Order for Aspera's Galaxy Mission

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

NASA Awards Launch Service Task Order for Aspera's Galaxy Mission

WASHINGTON, May 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- NASA has selected Rocket Lab USA Inc. of Long Beach, California, to launch the agency's Aspera mission, a SmallSat to study galaxy formation and evolution, providing new insights into how the universe works. The selection is part of NASA's Venture-Class Acquisition of Dedicated and Rideshare (VADR) launch services contract. This contract allows the agency to make fixed-price indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity launch service task order awards during VADR's five-year ordering period, with a maximum total contract value of $300 million. Through the observation of ultraviolet light, Aspera will examine hot gas in the space between galaxies, called the intergalactic medium. The mission will study the inflow and outflow of gas from galaxies, a process thought to contribute to star formation. Aspera is part of NASA's Pioneers Program in the Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington, which funds compelling astrophysics science at a lower cost using small hardware and modest payloads. The principal investigator for Aspera is Carlos Vargas at the University of Arizona in Tucson. NASA's Launch Services Program, based at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, manages the VADR contract. To learn more about NASA's Aspera mission and the Pioneers Program, visit: View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE NASA Sign in to access your portfolio

NASA Awards Launch Service Task Order for Aspera's Galaxy Mission
NASA Awards Launch Service Task Order for Aspera's Galaxy Mission

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

NASA Awards Launch Service Task Order for Aspera's Galaxy Mission

WASHINGTON, May 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- NASA has selected Rocket Lab USA Inc. of Long Beach, California, to launch the agency's Aspera mission, a SmallSat to study galaxy formation and evolution, providing new insights into how the universe works. The selection is part of NASA's Venture-Class Acquisition of Dedicated and Rideshare (VADR) launch services contract. This contract allows the agency to make fixed-price indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity launch service task order awards during VADR's five-year ordering period, with a maximum total contract value of $300 million. Through the observation of ultraviolet light, Aspera will examine hot gas in the space between galaxies, called the intergalactic medium. The mission will study the inflow and outflow of gas from galaxies, a process thought to contribute to star formation. Aspera is part of NASA's Pioneers Program in the Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington, which funds compelling astrophysics science at a lower cost using small hardware and modest payloads. The principal investigator for Aspera is Carlos Vargas at the University of Arizona in Tucson. NASA's Launch Services Program, based at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, manages the VADR contract. To learn more about NASA's Aspera mission and the Pioneers Program, visit: View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE NASA

OpenAI launches program to design new 'domain-specific' AI benchmarks
OpenAI launches program to design new 'domain-specific' AI benchmarks

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

OpenAI launches program to design new 'domain-specific' AI benchmarks

OpenAI, like many AI labs, thinks AI benchmarks are broken. It says it wants to fix them through a new program. Called the OpenAI Pioneers Program, the program will focus on creating evaluations for AI models that "set the bar for what good looks like," as OpenAI phrased it in a blog post. "As the pace of AI adoption accelerates across industries, there is a need to understand and improve its impact in the world," the company continued in its post. "Creating domain-specific evals are one way to better reflect real-world use cases, helping teams assess model performance in practical, high-stakes environments." As the recent controversy with the crowdsourced benchmark LM Arena and Meta's Maverick model illustrate, it's tough to know, these days, precisely what differentiates one model from another. Many widely-used AI benchmarks measure performance on esoteric tasks, like solving doctorate-level math problems. Others can be gamed, or don't align well with most people's preferences. Through the Pioneers Program, OpenAI hopes to create benchmarks for specific domains like legal, finance, insurance, healthcare, and accounting. The lab says that, in the coming months, it'll work with "multiple companies" to design tailored benchmarks and eventually share those benchmarks publicly, along with "industry-specific" evaluations. "The first cohort will focus on startups who will help lay the foundations of the OpenAI Pioneers Program," OpenAI wrote in the blog post. "We're selecting a handful of startups for this initial cohort, each working on high-value, applied use cases where AI can drive real-world impact." Companies in the program will also have the opportunity to work with OpenAI's team to create model improvements via reinforcement fine tuning, a technique that optimizes models for a narrow set of tasks, OpenAI says. The big question is whether the AI community will embrace benchmarks whose creation was funded by OpenAI. OpenAI has supported benchmarking efforts financially before, and designed its own evaluations. But partnering with customers to release AI tests may be seen as an ethical bridge too far. This article originally appeared on TechCrunch at

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