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Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 255

Oct 22, 2020

Rocket builder Firefly Aerospace aims for first launch from California in late December, CEO says

Posted by in category: space travel

Firefly Aerospace currently plans for its maiden Alpha rocket launch to happen as early as Dec. 22, co-founder and CEO Tom Markusic told CNBC, as his company prepares for the next major milestone in its plan to offer a variety of space transportation services.

Markusic is confident in the launch date because of the “rigid” requirements of Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, where Firefly is finishing up work to prepare the launchpad at SLC-2. While “everything is susceptible to surprises,” with room in the schedule to launch as late as Jan. 31, Markusic said the “full gamut of rules” at Vandenberg means the company has put extra work into certification for Alpha’s first launch.

“We took the hard route to flight, and that was by going to a launch range that has very strict requirements,” Markusic said. “So our design has been highly vetted, as we have a lot of requirements that are put on us by the range and that makes the rocket ultimately more reliable.

Oct 22, 2020

Researchers Built a “Gravity Suit” to Keep Astronauts Healthy

Posted by in category: space travel

“The mobile gravity suit is a small, untethered, and flexible intravehicular activity (IVA) suit,” the researchers wrote in their paper published in the Frontiers in Physiology journal.

The idea is to give astronauts maximum flexibility while on board a spacecraft, without reducing crew time. “With the gravity suit, astronauts will be able to float freely around the space station while adhering to their every day tasks,” the paper reads.

“The negative pressure is generated by its own portable vacuum system, ensuring full mobility, and user-control,” the paper reads.

Oct 21, 2020

The Direct Fusion Drive That Could Get Us to Saturn in Just 2 Years

Posted by in category: space travel

Suddenly, a billion miles doesn’t seem so far.


Experts say the right kind of propulsion system could carry spacecraft to Saturn in just two years. The direct fusion drive (DFD), a concept being developed by Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, would make extremely fast work of the nearly billion miles between Earth and Saturn.

Continue reading “The Direct Fusion Drive That Could Get Us to Saturn in Just 2 Years” »

Oct 21, 2020

Elon Musk reveals Mars ‘acid test’ for future colonies to survive without Earth

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

Elon Musk wants a self sufficient city on Mars.


SpaceX boss says civilisation on Earth is ‘looking a little rickety right now’.

Oct 20, 2020

Virgin Galactic test flight scheduled to launch this fall

Posted by in category: space travel

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The president of Virgin Galactic gave state lawmakers an update Monday on the company’s progress toward commercial spaceflight.

Virgin Galactic President Mike Moses said the first test space flight from Spaceport America will happen sometime this fall, which is the final step before taking paying customers into space.

Oct 20, 2020

Fusion-Drive Spacecraft: Express Solar System Travel, If We Figure It Out

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, space travel

Step One: Harness nuclear fusion. Step Two: Go fast. Very, very fast.

Oct 20, 2020

How to Go to Mars – To Stay

Posted by in category: space travel

Let’s get this over with once and for all: We are going to Mars. The only questions are: When? Who? How? Which way? And, of course, why?

Why?

Continue reading “How to Go to Mars – To Stay” »

Oct 20, 2020

Science confirms: Earth has more than one ‘moon’

Posted by in categories: science, space travel

Two massive clouds of dust in orbit around the Earth have been discussed for years and finally proven to exist.

Oct 19, 2020

SpaceX Mars city: Elon Musk details 1 test its success depends on

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk wants to build a city on Mars, but there’s one crucial test that will determine whether his plan is a success.

Oct 19, 2020

NASA Goddard on Facebook Watch

Posted by in category: space travel

On this day in 1899, Robert Goddard first considered the concept of space flight, which his work would later help make a reality.

On this particular fall afternoon at age 17, he was sent to prune a cherry tree in his backyard. While he worked, he found himself imagining, as he later wrote in his diary, “how wonderful it would be to make some device which had even the possibility of ascending to Mars, and how it would look on a small scale, if sent up from the meadow at my feet.”

It was at that moment that Robert Goddard dedicated himself to making space flight a reality. As he was to recall later, “I was a different boy when I descended the tree from when I ascended for existence at last seemed very purposive.”