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Jun18

NASA ScienceCasts: Strange flames on the ISS

by TopSpacer on June 18, 2013 at 4:21 pm
Posted In: Living in Space, Science and Technology

The latest NASA ScienceCast reports on combustion studies on the ISS:

Researchers experimenting with flames onboard the International Space Station have produced a strange, cool-burning form of fire that could help improve the efficiency of auto engines.

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Jun18

Update on the Arkyd space telescope Kickstarter campaign

by TopSpacer on June 18, 2013 at 5:24 am
Posted In: Astronomy, Education, Space participation

The Planetary Resources fund-raising for the ARKYD public access space telescope has reached 10,350 Backers and $916,582 pledged towards the $1,000,000 goal with 12 days to go. That’s a tremendous accomplishment for a space Kickstarter campaign but it actually seems a bit disappointing considering how fast the pledges were coming in during the first couple weeks. It looks like they will have to work hard just to make sure they reach the $1.0M goal, much less meet their $2M stretch goal to fund exoplanet searches.

Kickstarter campaigns often have a surge in the final few days as efforts intensify to meet the deadline. So it’s still likely they will beat the $1M goal and it will be interesting to see how far past it they get.

Follow their money raising rate at ARKYD: A Space Telescope for Everyone by Planetary Resources :: Kicktraq.

ExoplanetStretchGoal

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Jun18

Spacevidcast 6.17: Not because it’s easy

by TopSpacer on June 18, 2013 at 1:01 am
Posted In: Activism, General, SpaceCasts

The latest Spacevidcast show is now available online: Not Because it’s Easy – Spacevidcast Live 6.17 – Spacevidcast -

Caption:

 First off, you can grab George’s book, “Not because it’s easy” on Amazon here: http://www.amazon.com/Not-Because-Eas…

The ARKYD Kickstarter can be found here: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1…

The wiki article for this episode can be found here: http://wiki.spacevidcast.com/en/6.17

In Space News we have China’s Shenzhou-10 launch and docking, ATV-4 docking, sending your own message to space, Planetary Resources and Congress has no love for NASA asteroid missions.

George Schellenger joins us to talk about his new book and gangs around in After Dark to also talk about Project Blue Pride.

Spacevidcast is a live weekly show all about space and the comsos. Covering major events from NASA, ESA, JAXA, Roscosmos, SpaceX and more, Spacevidcast is your weekly news and views show for every space geek! Tune in live each Saturday at 21:00 UTC / 2:00 pm PDT / 5:00pm EDT and be a part of the community that helps make our live shows amazing. Or simply subscribe to the Spacevidcast channel on YouTube and get your Space Geek on each week!

 

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Jun17

Sci-Tech: KONE UltraRope makes sky-scraping skyscrapers feasible

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:45 pm
Posted In: Science and Technology

KONE Elevators of Finland has developed a super-strong, lightweight carbon fiber based cables that allow for much higher skyscrapers and are the first step towards fibers capable of space elevators: Lifts and skyscrapers: The other mile-high club: A new lightweight lift cable will let buildings soar ever upward – The Economist.

See also KONE UltraRope – The benchmark in high-rise technology and innovation

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Jun17

Videos: Tribute to Carl Sagan with space vistas and the music of Daniel Hope

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:13 pm
Posted In: Space Arts, Space films and videos, Space Music

Brittany Manning points me to her excellent videos of space imagery combined with the words of Carl Sagan and the music of Daniel Hope:

 

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Jun17

The Space Show this week

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 2:49 pm
Posted In: Activism, SpaceCasts

The Space Show this week:

1. Monday, June 17, 2013, 2-3:30 PM PDT (5-6:30 PM EDT, 4-5:30 PM CDT): We welcome back KEVIN SLOA to discuss & update us on The Mars Society‘s University Rover Challenge for this year.

2. Tuesday, June 18 2013, 7-8:30 PM PDT (10-11:30 PM EDT, 9-10:30 PM CDT): BRYCE RUSS is with us for a Yuri’s Night Wrap-up.

3. Friday, June 21, 2013, 9:30-11 AM PDT (11:30- 1 PM CDT, 12:30PM-2:00 PM EDT): We welcome ROB KELSO, Executive Director of the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems (PISCES).

4. Sunday, June 23, 2013, 12-1:30 PM PDT (3-4:30 PM EDT, 2-3:30 PM CDT). We welcome Dr Gil Levin from the Mars Viking Project and Arizona State.

See also:
/– The Space Show on Vimeo – webinar videos
/– The Space Show’s Blog – summaries of interviews.
/– The Space Show Classroom Blog – tutorial programs

The Space Show is a project of the One Giant Leap Foundation.

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Jun17

Copenhagen Suborbitals: Sapphire rocket video

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 2:40 pm
Posted In: DIY space, Rockets

Copenhagen Suborbitals posts a new video about their Sapphire guided rocket, which they plan to launch soon.

Caption;

The Sapphire team explains how the rocket is built and share details about the mission. Sapphire is Copenhagen Suborbitals first attempt to launch a active guided rocket.

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Jun17

Carnival of Space #306 – Urban Astronomer

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 2:12 pm
Posted In: General

Urban Astronomer hosts the latest Carnival of Space.

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Jun17

The next-gen Teachers in Space

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:51 am
Posted In: Education, Space participation, Spaceflight & Parabolic Flight

Ed Wright of Citizens in Space gives the background to various programs aimed at sending teachers and other educators into space and lays out his organization’s plans for the future: Teachers in Space: The Next Generation – CitizensInSpace.org.

Citizens in Space continues to expand and grow. We have not abandoned the original goals of Teachers in Space, nor have we “split” the program or transferred any part of the program to another organization. We still hope to enable a large number of teachers to fly in space and return to the classroom, along with people from every walk of life.

There are other organizations that have the goal of flying teachers in space. The Challenger Center for Space Science Education has acquired two seats on a Virgin Galactic flight for teachers. Virgin Galactic has also donated a seat to the Royal Air Force for a British teacher. So far, however, we are the only organization that has purchased a significant block of flights and initiated a training program for citizen astronauts. We hope we will not be alone much longer. Regardless of what other organizations do, however, our path is clear. As President Reagan said, our hopes and journeys will continue.

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Jun17

Sci-Tech: Storing hydrogen in reusable plastic pellets

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:25 am
Posted In: Science and Technology, Space Systems

Dr. Stephen Perusich, Senior Scientist at Cella Energy, talks about the firm’s hydrogen storage technology: New Hydrogen Pellets Allow Better Fuel Storage and Radiation Protection – SpaceSafetyMagazine.com

 

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Jun17

Rock found in Massachusetts is Russian spacecraft debris

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:18 am
Posted In: History, Space Collecting

A Massachusetts man found a rock by a river near his house that turned out to be ballast from a Soviet/Russian spacecraft, possibly the Mir space station:

  • Rock Found In Amesbury Backyard Came From Space Station – CBS Boston
  • NASA: Amesbury rock came from Soviet spacecraft: NASA confirms: Rock came from Soviet spacecraft – EagleTribune.com, North Andover, MA

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Jun17

Classic space opera novels – suggestions for filmmakers

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:12 am
Posted In: Solar Sci-Fi, Space films and videos

Hollywood would have no shortage of space stories to tell if they followed the recommendations on this page: What classic space opera novel do you want to see on the big screen? – io9.com.

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2 Comments
Jun17

Videos: Mars One and asteroids at ISDC 2013

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 5:08 am
Posted In: Activism, Asteroids, Space Settlement

Moonandback has posted lots of videos from the recent National Space Society ISDC 2013 event in San Diego, including these three:

Bas Lansdorp of Mars One:

Asteroids session, Pt. 1:

Asteroid session, Pt.2:

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Jun17

Space policy roundup – June.17.13

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 4:53 am
Posted In: Space Policy

Some recent space policy related posts:

  • Tweaking the proposed export control reforms for hosted payloads and suborbital vehicles « Space Politics
  • In space, Chinese are still far behind – Florida Today
  • Ariane 5 rocket upgrades could be accelerated – Spaceflight Now
  • Former army boss Walt Natynczyk tapped to lead Canadian Space Agency – Globalnews.ca
  • House Passes FY2014 NDAA With ORS Amendment – spacepolicyonline.com
  • Space Policy Events of Interest for the Week of June 17-21, 2013

Update:  Res Communis posts the latest collection of space and aviation related law, regulation and policy links: Library: A Round-up of Reading.

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Jun17

AMSAT & ISS amateur radio news

by TopSpacer on June 17, 2013 at 4:38 am
Posted In: Amateur/Student Satellite, Space Radio

Go to AMSAT News for the latest headlines about developments in amateur and student satellites and for updates about amateur radio on the ISS.

ANS 167 Weekly AMSAT Bulletin – June 16, 2013:

* HAM Video for the ISS Announced by ARISS
* AMSAT Videos from Dayton Hamvention
* AMSAT Area Coordinator Kevin Smith, N3HKQ, now SK
* RECENT AMSAT AWARDS
* Fox-2 MPPT Team Selected In TI Design Contest
* AMSAT Field Day 2013 – One More Time
* Wilse Morgan WX7P (ex-KL7CQ) SK
* ARISS News
* Satellite Shorts From All Over

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Jun16

Space music from Fred Becker

by TopSpacer on June 16, 2013 at 7:58 pm
Posted In: Activism, Space Music

Musician and space advocate Fred Becker points me to his new website and to his page at the CD Baby Music Store, which offers his latest album – Arcology.

See and hear his other albums here.

Find also an entry for Fred in the HobbySpace Music section.

And here is one of Fred’s music videos:

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Jun16

50 years since Valentina Tereshkova flew to space

by TopSpacer on June 16, 2013 at 4:11 pm
Posted In: History

Today is the 50th anniversary of the spaceflight of Valentina Tereshkova, the first women to go to space:

  • Valentina Tereshkova: First Woman in Space – Discovery News
  • Cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova; 1st Woman in Space 50 Years Ago! Ready for Mars – Universe Today
  • Major Milestone: 50 Years of Women in Space | Anniversary of Valentina Tereshkova’s Flight – Space.com

Video highlights of her trip to space:

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Jun16

Buzz Aldrin on Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me!

by TopSpacer on June 16, 2013 at 5:42 am
Posted In: Events, History

Buzz Aldrin participated in the NPR news quiz show Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me! on Saturday, June 15th:  Not My Job: Astronaut Buzz Aldrin On Getting Mooned – NPR

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Jun15

Lone Signal – using a big dish to broadcast messages to ET

by TopSpacer on June 15, 2013 at 5:04 pm
Posted In: SETI, Space participation

The LONE SIGNAL project, which officially opens on June 18th,  wants to send messages to an extraterrestrial intelligence (METI) using a former NASA radio dish near Carmel, California : Lone Signal: METI Teams Up With Citizen Science To Try And Make First Contact – Science 2.0

Lone Signal is going to start firing off messages on a recurring basis and its first target is Gliese 526 in the constellation Boötes, just under 18 light years from us. And they are going to let the public decide what those messages are, no prime numbers or atomic elements dictated by committees. It can be pictures of your cat, though if you just sign up you can only send one short text message – all the electricity to fire up a 97 foot dish and transmit into space doesn’t come cheap – and more elaborate stuff is only available if you contribute money to the cause. After it’s sent, you can monitor how far it has gone and discuss with other people in the Lone Signal community.

The article includes an interview with Jamie King of Lone Signal.

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Jun15

Pluto probe to stay on course despite dust/debris collision worries

by TopSpacer on June 15, 2013 at 4:12 pm
Posted In: Space Science

The New Horizons probe heading towards Pluto will stay on course despite concerns of a possible collision with orbital dust and debris that have been found to be greater that expected since the launch of the mission (link via Twitter / jeff_foust):

New Horizons Team Sticking to Original Flight Plan at Pluto

 Unless significant new hazards are found, expect NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft to stay on its original course past Pluto and its moons, after mission managers concluded that the danger posed by dust and debris in the Pluto system is less than they once feared.

The New Horizons team recently completed an 18-month study of potential impact hazards – mostly dust created by objects hitting Pluto’s small satellites – the spacecraft would face as it speeds some 30,000 miles per hour (more than 48,000 kilometers per hour) past Pluto in July 2015. The team estimated that the probability of a mission-ending dust impact was less than 0.3 percent if the spacecraft followed the current baseline plan, far below some early, more conservative estimates. So, with the concurrence of an independent review panel and NASA, the project team expects to keep New Horizons on this baseline course, which includes a close approach of about 12,500 kilometers (nearly 7,800 miles) from the surface of Pluto.

Image of Pluto system
Safe passage: With the dust-impact hazard less than once feared, the
New Horizons team plans to keep its spacecraft on the baseline trajectory
through the Pluto system

“We found that loss of the New Horizons mission by dust impacting the spacecraft is very unlikely, and we expect to follow the nominal, or baseline, mission timeline that we’ve been refining over the past few years,” says New Horizons Project Scientist Hal Weaver, of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. “Still, we’ll be ready with two alternative timelines, in the event that the impact risk turns out to be greater than we think.”

Those alternate plans (called SHBOTs, short for Safe Haven by Other Trajectories) are being developed should new information – gathered from New Horizons camera observations during the approach to Pluto, for example, or new dust-dynamics analyses – indicate less-than-smooth sailing for New Horizons.

One plan, the Generic Inner SHBOT, is essentially the same as baseline trajectory, but with the spacecraft turned so that its 7-foot dish antenna faces the incoming dust particles; this “Antenna-to-Ram” (or ATR) configuration would protect the spacecraft underneath. The Deep Inner SHBOT also employs ATR protection, but would additionally dip the trajectory to within just 3,000 kilometers (nearly 1,900 miles) of Pluto’s surface, where atmospheric drag tends to sweep out lingering dust.

New Horizons managers recently presented their impact-hazard outlook and if-necessary mitigation plans to an independent NASA review panel and to the NASA Science Mission Directorate Program Management Council – receiving endorsements from both.

New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute, says the mission team is now finalizing plans for the Pluto encounter. In early July, the team will rehearse the most critical nine-day segment of the baseline encounter plan, putting itself and the spacecraft through the paces of the flight toward and just past Pluto and its moons.

Stern adds that the spacecraft remains on target for a close approach to Pluto in 2015, all subsystems are performing nominally, and “the anticipated science observations will revolutionize our understanding of dwarf planets and the Kuiper belt, and excite a whole new generation of the public to the first reconnaissance of a planet on the very frontier of our solar system.”

===

More at The PI’s Perspective: Encounter Planning Accelerates – New Horizons

New Horizons trajectories passed Pluto
The New Horizons team studied numerous alternate flybys, called SHBOTs, before
recommending to NASA a pair of backups to protect New Horizons from
possible impact hazards in the Pluto system.

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