The Planetary Society sponsors science and technology projects to seed further exploration. All of these projects are funded by the society’s members and donors. Some projects include:
LightSail In 2015, The Planetary Society launched a crowdfunding campaign to finance two solar sailing space missions. The Planetary Society published data from the flights in a number of scientific papers. Its chief scientist, Bruce Betts, has since consulted with NASA teams working on their own solar sail missions.
SETI The Planetary Society has supported several different projects related to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. In 1981, the society partnered with NASA to fund Suitcase SETI, an instrument which eventually grew into the first dedicated high-resolution SETI survey. Four years later, the society collaborated with
Steven Spielberg to help finance the Megachannel ExtraTerrestrial Array (META), the most advanced SETI search at the time. Subsequent Society-sponsored SETI projects included the META II and SERENDIP radio surveys, the first dedicated all-sky optical SETI survey, the "Are we alone in the universe?"
citizen science project, and the
SETI@home initiative to process SERENDIP data using a volunteer network of personal computers.
STEP grants In 2021, The Planetary Society established its Science and Technology Empowering the Public (STEP) Grants as a means of providing dedicated support to projects related to the search for life, planetary exploration, and planetary defense. The society regularly holds open calls for STEP Grant proposals and has awarded nearly $200,000 to four different projects so far. Grant winners have included an asteroid research program at the
University of Belgrade, a space agriculture program at the
University of Florida, a citizen science SETI project based out of the
University of California, Los Angeles, and an astrobiology project at
Dartmouth College related to saline marine environments on other worlds.
Shoemaker NEO grants In 1997, The Planetary Society founded the Shoemaker NEO Grant program to support a global network of amateur astronomers dedicated to finding, tracking, and studying potentially dangerous near-Earth objects. Awardees receive funds to upgrade their equipment so they can better observe their targets. More than 50 astronomers in over 20 different countries have received grants since the program’s founding, with over $500,000 awarded to date. As of 2025, Shoemaker grants have helped amateur astronomers discover nearly 500 NEOs and perform observations of over 19,000 others. One recent grant winner, Leonardo Amaral, discovered a rare kilometer-sized asteroid in 2020. This asteroid, 2020 QU6, is large enough to cause global devastation if it ever hit Earth, though no impact is anticipated based on its current orbital trajectory.
PlanetVac In 2013, The Planetary Society helped fund a prototype and laboratory test of
Honeybee Robotics’ PlanetVac instrument, a technology designed to perform reliable, low-cost sample collection on other worlds. Five years later, Society members helped fund another test of PlanetVac, this time on a live rocket. The test was a success and increased PlanetVac’s
technology readiness level. In 2025, a version of PlanetVac landed and operated on the Moon as part of Firefly Aerospace’s
Blue Ghost Mission 1. Another version, called "P Sampler", will collect samples as part of
JAXA’s Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) mission to bring back material from
Phobos, scheduled to launch in 2026. The society has also funded research into the
Pioneer anomaly, exoplanet detection,
panspermia, asteroid deflection, the
Chicxulub impact, and Mars rovers and drills. == Public outreach and education ==