Awarded the Group Achievement Award from NASA in 2017
Case Study

NASA Earth & Space Air Prize

Replaced the particle sensor on the International Space Station (ISS) and also measured air quality in communities across America
Awarded the Group Achievement Award from NASA in 2017
Results Announced
Amount Awarded
$250k
Program Dates
Sept 2017 - Nov 2018
Program Website
Visit Website
Awarded the Group Achievement Award from NASA in 2017
$520,200
Saved in administrative fees (NASA Vendor Evaluation)
544
Registered Teams
Meet the Finalists & Winner
Carrot has been exceptional and extremely responsive to the needs of the dynamic and changing challenge environment. Carrot has been very proactive interacting with our management, contracting team, customer owners, and challenge leads through regularly scheduled telecoms and discussion. All the interaction was done in a timely, respectful, and conscientious manner that facilitated an excellent working relationship.
NASA Center of Excellence for Collaborative Innovation
2020 Vendor Evaluation
NASA
3
Prototypes Developed
$520,200
Saved in administrative fees (NASA Vendor Evaluation)
544
Registered Teams
Meet the Finalists & Winner
Carrot has been exceptional and extremely responsive to the needs of the dynamic and changing challenge environment. Carrot has been very proactive interacting with our management, contracting team, customer owners, and challenge leads through regularly scheduled telecoms and discussion. All the interaction was done in a timely, respectful, and conscientious manner that facilitated an excellent working relationship.
NASA Center of Excellence for Collaborative Innovation
2020 Vendor Evaluation
NASA
3
Prototypes Developed
Goal of the Competition
The NASA Earth & Space Air Prize, with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is focused on identifying solutions that can catalyze the development of easy to maintain, small, and affordable aerosol sensor technology that has the potential to be useful in spaceflight as well as on Earth anywhere outdoors in a community where pedestrians may be exposed to airborne particle matter.
Outcomes & Result

The first crew arrived on the International Space Station (ISS) in November of 2000. After decades of hosting space travellers, the particle sensor, a critical piece of technology to measure airborne matter required replacement. Rather than hiring a team of engineers to develop the part, NASA contracted Carrot to host a prize competition for attracting new talent to conceive and test effective and payload-ready devices. As you can imagine, there are few more sensitive and specific instruments than a particle sensor for the ISS. Carrot was tasked with ensuring that the application requirements met both all of the necessary procurement regulations and technical specifications.

In addition, NASA partnered with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), to ensure multiple uses of the resulting solutions. RWJF’s specific interest was to measure air quality in neighborhoods across America, to determine disparities of pollutants and to support communities working to improve public health. The commingling of private and public funds is permitted under federal regulations, but this was the first such partnership ever used under the legal authority of the America COMPETES Act (the enabling legislation for prizes/challenges). Working closely with these two organizations, Carrot received NASA’s Group Achievement Award for our efforts to ensure “outstanding contributions to the Agency’s mission” by managing a wide range of inputs from the partners and their experts.

Following the success of the program, NASA conducted a vendor evaluation of Carrot and determined that $520,200 of savings had been realized by relying on Carrot’s services and platform, as compared to internal costs for NASA to have developed a similar initiative. Further, through Carrot's outreach and engagement plan, the goal of reaching registered teams was 550% over the projected level of participation, and many of those participants - including the awardees - were new to NASA or had not received previous funding from NASA, representing an entirely new community of practice (still available to NASA’s experts) and a broad array of new technical approaches that NASA continues to investigate.

  • 544 Registered Teams
  • 20 Applications
  • 39 States Reached
  • 21 Subject Matter Expert Judges
  • 3 Finalists
  • 1 Awardee
  • $100k invested

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