Category Archives: Mars

Videos: Mars 2020 overview, Global weather time lapse for Oct.2017, Falcon booster landing blooper reel

A selection of space videos of interest:

** A preview of NASA’s Mars 2020 Rover mission:

** Global weather October 2017 – Eumetsat

A movie of weather across the globe during October of 2017.

Our series of monthly weather videos shows a combination of infrared imagery from the geostationary and polar-orbiting satellites of EUMETSAT, NOAA, the CMA and the JMA which, together, continuously observe the Earth’s surface 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

This data is used to help forecasters predict weather patterns and warn citizens of adverse weather conditions, hours and sometimes days in advance.

To see a full view of the Earth from the last hours, as seen by Meteosat-10, check out our web page at:  [EUMETSAT IPPS animation – Meteosat 0 degree Natural Colour]

** How Not to Land an Orbital Rocket Booster

SpaceX has now successfully landed 15 first stage boosters in a row and 19 total. However, it took several rounds of trial and error to achieve that success:

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Videos: An Apollo tribute + Fidget spinners in micro-g + Igniting rockets + Virtually roving Mars

Some videos of interest:

** Via The Chiles Files comes this beautifully made tribute by Christian Stangl to the Apollo program combining thousands of photos with animations along with a nice soundtrack:

** Fun with fidget spinners in weightlessness on the ISS:

** How Rockets Are Ignited – Things Kerbal Space Program Doesn’t Teach – Another fun rocket tutorial with Scott Manley of the Kerbal Space Program

** Check out NASA JPL’s Access Mars: A WebVR Experiment to travel Mars in Virtual Reality created in collaboration with Google:

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Videos: TMRO Orbit 10.38 – LUNARES Moon and Mars simulated living

The latest TMRO.tv live program is now available in the archive: LUNARES Moon and Mars simulated living – Orbit 10.38 – TMRO

We talk with the crew running the ICAres-1 mission aboard the LUNARES Mobile Research Station. We will cover what the simulation is doing, how the accomplish it and why it is important for teh future of humans living and working in space.

Space news topics:

  • Haumea, the egg
  • Planet 9 Evidence Mounts!

Last week’s launches:

  • Long March 2D Returns to Flight with Venezuelan Satellite
  • SpaceX Launches 3rd batch of IridiumNEXT satellites
  • H2-A Rocket launches final Japanese GPS Satellite
  • SpaceX Launches ComSat on Reused Rocket
  • Rockot launches Sentinal 5P for ESA
  • Soyuz launches Progress MS-07

TMRO is viewer supported:

TMRO:Space is a crowd funded show. If you like this episode consider contributing to help us to continue to improve. Head over to http://www.patreon.com/tmro for information plus our all new goals and reward levels 

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The recent TMRO short reports:

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“Pioneer” – A space science-fiction novel from Robert Zimmerman

Space historian and journalist Bob Zimmerman has released a science fiction book called Pioneer, which he actually wrote in 1982 but it portrays a future of space settlement very relevant to what is happening in the space world today: Pioneer | Behind The Black. Here is a press release about Pioneer:

Riveting First Alien Contact Novel By Award-winning Space Historian Portrays an Exciting Future
The body of a man who disappeared 46 years earlier on an asteroid near Jupiter is found on Mars,
with proof of alien life. How did he get there, and who were the aliens?
To find out will require a journey that skims the Sun and flies beyond Saturn.

TUCSON, Ariz. – Oct. 3, 2017 – PRLog — Before he became an award-winning space historian and science journalist, Robert Zimmerman wrote a riveting science fiction novel, PIONEER, about humanity’s first contact with aliens, set two hundred years in the future. Though it was written more than three decades ago, the book remains amazingly authentic in its portrayal of the future settlement of the solar system, based on what has happened the last decades of 20th century as well as the exciting emergence of a private commercial space industry now in the early 21st century.

That book has now at last been published.

The year is 2183. Fifty-six-year-old Saunders Maxwell is a stubborn old space-farer who has spent his entire life in space. He has commanded the Moon-Mars shuttle and led exploration missions beyond Mars. Later he turned to asteroid mining, captaining a small ship and crew on repeated trips to the asteroid belt, bringing back minerals or even small asteroids to sell so that the Mars colony could harvest them for the needed resources.

As he and his pilot Harry Nickerson fly over the vast slopes of the giant volcano Olympus Mons on their way home from one such mining mission, Maxwell spots a strange glint below, a glint that is not natural and should not be there.

When they land they discover something entirely unexpected and impossible, the body of man who had disappeared on a distant asteroid almost a half century before. Sanford Addiono had been on one of the first manned missions to the asteroid belt when he and a partner had vanished. Nothing was ever heard from them again. Even more baffling, two later missions to that asteroid found that it had disappeared as well, no longer in orbit where it was supposed to be.

Now, 46 years later, Maxwell finds Addiono’s body on the surface of Mars. How Addiono had gotten to Mars from a distant lost asteroid–without a spaceship–was baffling.

That riddle was magnified by what Addiono had brought back with him. Among his effects was a six-fingered robot hand that had clearly been made by some alien civilization, along with a recorder and memo book describing what Addiono had seen.

Here was a mystery that would rock humanity, the first alien contact. And at that moment Saunders Maxwell decides that he is going to be the person to solve that mystery, even if it takes him through hell and back.

Unfortunately, that is exactly where that journey takes him.

The vision that Zimmerman paints of vibrant human colonies on the Moon, Mars, the asteroids, and beyond, indomitably fighting the harsh lifeless environment of space to build new societies, captures perfectly the emerging space race we see today.

He also captures in Pioneer the heart of the human spirit, willing to push forward no matter the odds, no matter the cost. It is that spirit that will make the exploration of the heavens possible, forever, into the never-ending future.

About: Robert Zimmerman is an award-winning science journalist and historian who has written five books and innumerable articles on science, engineering, and the history of space exploration and technology for ASTRONOMY, AIR & SPACE, SCIENCE, NATURAL HISTORY, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, USA TODAY, WIRED, INVENTION & TECHNOLOGY and a host of other publications. He also reports on space and science news at his website, BehindtheBlack.com (http://behindtheblack.com). His classic book, GENESIS, THE STORY OF APOLLO 8 (Mountain Lake Press: http://behindtheblack.com/books/genesis-the-story-of-apollo-8/), describes the epic family and political tale behind the first manned mission to another world. It remains a steady bestseller twenty years after its first publication.

In addition to his writing, Mr. Zimmerman is also a cave explorer and cartographer, and has participated in numerous projects exploring and mapping previously unknown caves across the United States. It is this activity that has allowed him to actually “go where no one has gone before,” thus providing him a better understanding of the perspective of the future space explorers on Mars and beyond as they struggle to push the limits of human existence.

About eBookIt.com: Since 2010, eBookIt.com (based in Sudbury, Massachusetts) has helped thousands of authors and publishers get their books converted to ebook format, and distributed to all the major ebook retailers, including Amazon.com, Barnesandnoble.com, Apple iBookstore, Kobo, Sony Readerstore, Ingram Digital, and Google eBookstore.

 

 

Video: SpaceX plans to build a huge new rocket vehicle for low cost space travel

Elon Musk gave a talk today at the International Astronautical Congress (IAC 2017) in Adelaide, Australia in which he described the design of a new SpaceX rocket system, informally called the BFR (e.g. “Big Freaking Rocket”). The company will soon start building the BFR with the goal of uncrewed flights to Mars by 2022 and crewed flights in 2024. The system can also be used to launch satellites, take crews and cargo to the International Space Station, and carry out missions to the lunar surface. He even talked about using it for 30 minute passenger flights between any two points on earth.

Here is Elon’s talk, which he titled, “Making Life Multiplanetary“:

An artist’s view of a BFR spaceship module on the Moon:

Here is a video showing how the vehicle could be used for point-to-point commercial transport on earth.

“Fly to most places on Earth in under 30 mins and anywhere in under 60. Cost per seat should be about the same as full fare economy in an aircraft. Forgot to mention that.” – Elon Musk

A brief clip showing a Mars base enabled by the BFR growing into a city:

SpaceX has credibility for such aspirations because the company has proven it can do things that were not considered feasible by many in the space industry even just a few years ago. Here, for example, is a compilation of clips showing the 16 successful landings so far of the SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage boosters:

Update: Astronomer Scott Manley of the Kerbal Space Program rocket simulator gives his view of the BFR:

And here is the Everyday Astronaut‘s take on the plan:

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