Spacevidcast 6-10: Eyes on the solar system

Spacevidcast posts the video of their latest live show: Spacevidcast 6-10:  Eyes on the Solar System – 6.10

Caption:

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Doug Eliison joins us in-studio to talk about the amazing ‘Eyes on the Solar System’ application. Fans of Eyes will also get a sneak peek in to the future revision with a new gaming engine!

In Space News we chat about SpaceX’s plans for reusability in 2013, Antares rolls out to the launch pad for first test mission, Yuri’s Night is less than a week away and Spacevidcast is looking for Mountain Climbers… On Mars!

Don’t let the conversation stop here! In addition to this great episode we continue speaking with Doug in After Dark. To watch this After Dark episode you can subscribe to Spacevidcast epic. For as little as $10/mo or $100/yr you not only get access to this exclusive content but an additional huge library of past shows, exclusive interviews and conferences. Spacevidcast epic helps us continue to product the show, we give you a bit extra and you help ensure we stay broadcasting! http://www.spacevidcast.com/epic for more information

A new exoplanet finder mission in 2017

Good to hear that there will be a follow up mission to the Kepler space observatory dedicated to finding exoplanets:

Update: Don’t see a website for the exoplanet project yet but here is a Wikipedia page:  Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite.

A commenter here, points also to the other  experiment that NASA approved – the Neutron star Interior Composition ExploreR (NICER). This will be mounted on the exterior of the ISS in 2017 to study neutron stars with a X-ray timing and spectroscopy instrument.

AMSAT and ISS amateur radio news

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 097 Weekly AMSAT Bulletin – April 6, 2013:

* AMSAT-NA Working on Coordination Issues with Experimental Satellites
* AMSAT YouTube Channel
* 2013 AMSAT Field Day Rules Posted On-Line
* ARRL Seeks Comments on 5 and 10 GHz National Band Plans
* Final IARU-R1 Vienna 2013 Papers Released
* First Satellite Contact Between Cuba and Ireland on FO-29
* NASA Seeks Academic Partners For Smallsat Technology Collaboration
* Upcoming ARISS Contacts

Gerard’t Hooft, Mars One, and space settlement

Though not as well known to the general public, at least in the US, as someone like Stephen Hawking or Steven Weinberg, the Dutch physicist Gerard ‘t Hooft is a member of the uppermost echelon of theoreticians of the past few decades. I knew that he had endorsed the Mars One  plan for a colony on the Red Planet but I had no idea he has long been an enthusiastic proponent of space settlement: Nobel physicist: Give people a one-way ticket to Mars – opinion/New Scientist.

Regarding the Mars One, he says

The concept fits in with my own ideas about human exploration of space, which I described in my book, Playing with Planets. In fact, the co-founder and general director of Mars One, Bas Lansdorp, once attended one of my lectures. When he asked me to become an ambassador for Mars One, my first reaction was that it will take much longer and cost much more than they currently envision. However, after learning more about the research they had carried out I became convinced that human flights to Mars could become a reality within 10 years. So in the end, I said yes.

Hawking is well known for his support for human spaceflight. Weinberg, on the other hand, has written more than one breathless polemic against HSF and especially against any government funding for it instead of particle accelerators.

I’m not one to appeal to  authority regarding the future of spaceflight. These diametrical views by some smart individuals on the question of humanity’s future expansion into space illustrate why this is an issue of personal judgement and values, not something that can be settled purely by reasoned argument. There is no way to prove a priori that expansion into space is more or less important to humanity than other priorities and pursuits such as answering fundamental scientific questions.

As costs and other barriers to space expansion fall, those who want to go will go and those who want to stay behind will do just that. If human settlements thrive and develop robust new cultures, then they will have been a great success. If settlements fail and everyone comes back home, then they will have been a great failure. As every theoretician will tell you, it is real life experiment that ultimately answers important questions.