All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
The Voyager–Max Space initiative aligns with Administrator Isaacman’s announcement to be on the Moon to stay by 2028.
Voyager Technologies holds approximately 67% of Starlab Space LLC and serves as the program’s primary integrator and managing partner.
Voyager Technologies’ initiative supports NASA’s goal of achieving a lasting presence on the moon by 2028.
Voyager Technologies will support internal research and development into space habitats for sustained lunar and deep space missions.
The Starlab program includes partners Voyager Technologies, Airbus, Mitsubishi Corporation, MDA Space, Palantir Technologies, ESA, JAXA, and Space Applications Services.
Voyager plans to concentrate its lunar efforts on foundational infrastructure for both human and robotic operations.
Voyager's objective is to be a leading player in the emerging lunar ecosystem by the end of the decade across civil, defense, and commercial markets.
Voyager has worked with NASA on the Moon to Mars Oxygen and Steel Technology program.
Voyager connects its lunar strategy to a commitment to tackle complex technical challenges, strengthen national security, and protect critical assets from the ground to space as the United States expands its presence beyond low Earth orbit.
Voyager's new lunar strategy focuses on turning high-level policy into sustained capability that endures over time.
Voyager's Clear Dust-Repellant Coating (CDRC) is designed to significantly reduce accumulation of lunar simulant dust on glass, metals, and a variety of fabrics.
Voyager emphasizes dual-use technologies, scalable architectures, interoperability, and early risk retirement as design principles intended to lower technical and programmatic risk for future lunar campaigns.
Dylan Taylor is chairman and CEO of Voyager.
Voyager is positioning its existing mission-ready portfolio as a core asset for its lunar initiative and highlights experience designing, integrating, and operating complex space systems for government and commercial customers.
Voyager will pursue additional partnerships, investments, and phased development activities to match evolving government and commercial timelines.
Voyager's planned lunar infrastructure includes systems to support crews, distribute power, build communications backbones, provide on-orbit and surface computing, and enable automated logistics for continuous operations.
Voyager's in-situ resource utilization work on metal and oxygen production from regolith is intended to reduce dependence on supplies launched from Earth for construction and life support on the Moon.
Voyager describes itself as a defense and space technology company focused on delivering mission-critical solutions across a range of applications.
The Case Closed report included photos of NASA Voyager-Mars and Viking aeroshells that had been tested in the desert.
LambdaVision has pre-booked commercial space in low-Earth orbit through partnerships with Starlab Space LLC, a joint venture led by Voyager Technologies.