Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 373

Dec 11, 2018

Curry signals willingness to meet with NASA over Moon landing doubts

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA offered to give Stephen Curry a tour of its lunar labs in Houston after the NBA superstar expressed doubts on the moon landings.


Three-time NBA champion Stephen Curry on Tuesday signaled that he is willing to take NASA up on its offer to tour its lunar lab in Houston after his pronouncement this week that he does not believe humans ever walked on the Moon.

During the “Winging It” podcast released on Monday, the Golden State Warriors guard asked fellow players Vince Carter and Kent Bazemore whether they believed humans had ever been to the Moon.

Continue reading “Curry signals willingness to meet with NASA over Moon landing doubts” »

Dec 11, 2018

NASA to NBA star Steph Curry: Yes, we went to the moon, and we can prove it

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA has offered to give NBA superstar Steph Curry a tour of one of its lunar labs after the Golden State Warriors guard said on a podcast that he doubts humans landed on the moon.

No, really.

Curry made the head-scratching comment on an episode of the “Winging It” podcast, which posted Monday. According to Bleacher Report, Curry brought up the subject himself during the more than hour-long podcast with fellow NBA players Vince Carter, Kent Bazemore and Andre Iguodala:

Continue reading “NASA to NBA star Steph Curry: Yes, we went to the moon, and we can prove it” »

Dec 11, 2018

OSIRIS-REx spacecraft already found water on its target asteroid

Posted by in category: space travel

The NASA explorer’s initial discoveries might provide some insight into the early Solar System.

Read more

Dec 10, 2018

Two research rockets successfully launched over the Norwegian Sea early Dec. 8 carrying an experiment to study the explosive process that allows charged particles from space to stream into Earth’s atmosphere

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space travel

The results promise to shed light on this and, in the long run, help us better predict how and when Earth’s magnetic shield can suddenly become porous to let outside particles in. Details: https://go.nasa.gov/2G8lTeX&h=AT0CScAabrNYUB0DKGANhglZ-EihhF…51Yf7jUjKw

Read more

Dec 10, 2018

NASA administrator: ‘The US is returning to the surface of the moon, and we’re doing it sooner than you think!’

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space travel

A big announcement from NASA about landing on the moon is coming on Thursday.


  • The last time NASA landed a spacecraft on the moon was in December 1972.
  • The US space agency said it’s about to announce “moon partnerships” with American companies to return to the lunar surface.
  • NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine claimed the new moon missions will occur “sooner than you think!”
  • NASA is withholding details of the announcement until Thursday afternoon, but Business Insider has independently confirmed some information.

If NASA’s stunning landing of a car-sized robot on Mars didn’t already whet your appetite for space exploration this week, mark your calendar for 2 p.m. EST on Thursday.

That’s when NASA plans to give an update about a program that aims to land privately developed spacecraft on the moon.

Continue reading “NASA administrator: ‘The US is returning to the surface of the moon, and we’re doing it sooner than you think!’” »

Dec 10, 2018

Solution for next generation nanochips comes out of thin air

Posted by in categories: computing, space travel

Researchers at RMIT University have engineered a new type of transistor, the building block for all electronics. Instead of sending electrical currents through silicon, these transistors send electrons through narrow air gaps, where they can travel unimpeded as if in space.

Read more

Dec 9, 2018

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk teases new Starship photos and “heavy metal” BFR

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

Drawn in by Teslarati photographer Pauline Acalin’s most recent photos of Port of LA Falcon 9 recovery operations SpaceX is in the midst of, CEO Elon Musk took to Twitter on December 8th to discuss titanium grid fins and – more importantly – answer a miscellaneous handful of questions about the status of BFR’s development.

Marked lately by rapid-fire, wide-reaching changes to BFR’s general structural composite, Musk at long last confirmed what some suspected – now known as Starship/Super Heavy, the BFR program has officially moved away from carbon fiber composites as the primary material of choice for the rocket’s structure and propellant tanks, instead pivoting to what Musk described as a “fairly heavy metal”.

But cool pics of the demo Starship that will fly suborbital hops coming in ~4 weeks.

Continue reading “SpaceX CEO Elon Musk teases new Starship photos and ‘heavy metal’ BFR” »

Dec 8, 2018

#DidYouKnow that Earth’s atmosphere leaks oxygen?

Posted by in category: space travel

We launched two sounding rockets that will help scientists understand atmospheric escape on our home planet that has applications all over the universe — from predicting which far off planets might be habitable, to piecing together how Mars became the desolate, exposed landscape it is today.

Read more

Dec 8, 2018

Days after its launch from Florida

Posted by in category: space travel

SpaceX’s #Dragon cargo spacecraft was successfully installed on the Earth-facing side of the International Space Station’s Harmony module at 10:36 a.m. EST. While there are now six spaceships attached at the station, the Dragon will spend about five weeks there and return to Earth in January 2019 with more than 4,000 pounds of research, hardware and crew supplies.

Read more

Dec 7, 2018

China launches lunar rover in historic mission to the dark side of the moon

Posted by in category: space travel

China launched the Chang’e 4 spacecraft atop a Long March 3B rocket on Friday in a milestone mission to land a rover on the far side of the moon.

Read more