Japanâs space agency has asked NASA to build a copy of an X-ray instrument onboard a Japanese Hitomi astronomy satellite that lost contact on March 26 with spacecraft controllers a month after its launch in February, Space News reported Thursday.Jeff Foust writes Paul Hertz, director of NASAâs astrophysics division, said NASA has begun to consider the development of a âbuild-to-printâ version of the Soft X-Ray Spectrometer for the JAXA agencyâs proposed ASTRO-H2 satellite that is expected to launch by 2020.
âJAXA has announced their intent to study a rebuild of Hitomiâ Hertz told the astrophysics subpanel of the NASA advisory councilâs science committee.
Hertz said NASA estimates development work on a new SXS will cost between $70 and $90 million over five years through 2021, Foust reports.
âIn my assessment, these kinds of changes do not cause grievous harm to our programs,â he told subcommittee members.
Hertz added he is scheduled to meet JAXA officials in early August to tackle NASAâs possible involvement in the proposed ASTRO-H2 mission, according to the report.
