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Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 446

Nov 16, 2016

Carbon nanotube dry adhesive holds in extreme cold, strengthens in extreme heat

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, space travel

Researchers from Case Western Reserve University, Dayton Air Force Research Laboratory and China have developed a new dry adhesive that bonds in extreme temperatures—a quality that could make the product ideal for space exploration and beyond.

The gecko-inspired adhesive loses no traction in temperatures as cold as liquid nitrogen or as hot as molten silver, and actually gets stickier as heat increases, the researchers report.

The research, which builds on earlier development of a single-sided dry adhesive tape based on vertically aligned carbon nanotubes, is published in the journal Nature Communications (“Carbon nanotube dry adhesives with temperature-enhanced adhesion over a large temperature range”). As far as the researchers know, no other dry adhesive is capable of working at such temperature extremes.

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Nov 16, 2016

Private Space Stations could start launching in 2020 and large multi-module stations able to hold 100 or more people by 2030

Posted by in categories: habitats, space travel

Bigelow Aerospace and Axiom Space — plan to launch habitat modules to orbit in 2020, with the aim of making some money off Earth. If all goes according to plan, private space stations will eventually form the backbone of commercial facilities that replace the International Space Station (ISS), which is currently funded through 2024.

“Hopefully, if we’re successful in the private-sector community, NASA’s going to save a boatload of money, on multiple locations [in orbit] — not just one — with more volume than they’ve ever had before,” Bigelow founder and CEO Robert Bigelow said here Wednesday (Oct. 12) at the 2016 International Symposium for Personal and Commercial Spaceflight (ISPCS). “So, whether it’s Axiom or us or other people, that is the future.”

A new company, named Axiom Space LLC, was incorporated in January, 2016 in Delaware but is based in Houston. Mike Suffredini (former NASA manager of the International Space Station) serves as its president and Kam Ghaffarian, the president and chief executive of SGT, is the chief executive.

Continue reading “Private Space Stations could start launching in 2020 and large multi-module stations able to hold 100 or more people by 2030” »

Nov 16, 2016

Project Blue: A Space Telescope to Find Another Earth — Project Blue | Kickstarter

Posted by in categories: science, space, space travel

unknown

“Finding the first planet like Earth beyond our solar system would transform how we think about our place in the universe.”

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Nov 16, 2016

NASA’s Quest for Suspended Animation Has Led to John Bradford’s Bear Den

Posted by in category: space travel

To get to Mars faster, humans might have to slow themselves down grizzly-style.

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Nov 12, 2016

Quick, How Might the Alien Spacecraft Work?

Posted by in categories: entertainment, space travel

How Stephen Wolfram helped with the theory of interstellar travel, communication with aliens and questions from the actors in “Arrival”, the movie.

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Nov 10, 2016

NASA’s HoloLens Demo Puts Researchers on Mars, Space Station and Workbench

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, space travel

Representatives of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab demonstrated the capability of Microsoft’s HoloLens headset for space exploration and research at New York University Nov. 7.

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Nov 8, 2016

Impossible Spaceship Engine Called “EmDrive” Actually Works, Leaked NASA Report Reveals

Posted by in categories: physics, space travel

Great news if it turns out to be true!


Though scientists are still trying to figure out how it doesn’t violate the laws of physics.

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Nov 7, 2016

Space race revealed: US and China test futuristic EmDrive on Tiangong-2 and mysterious X-37B plane

Posted by in categories: futurism, space travel

US and Chinese governments are already testing out their own EmDrive devices on spacecraft, sources say.

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Nov 7, 2016

NASA Successfully Tests the Engine That Will Take Us to Mars

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA tests the engine for the most powerful rocket ever built, designed for deep-space missions.

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Nov 7, 2016

Leaked NASA Eagleworks Paper Confirms Promising EmDrive Results

Posted by in categories: physics, space travel

In August Hacked covered the rumor, then confirmed by NASA, that a paper by the NASA Eagleworks team, titled “Measurement of Impulsive Thrust from a Closed Radio Frequency Cavity in Vacuum,” to be published in December’s issue of American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)’s Journal of Propulsion and Power, a prestigious peer-reviewed scientific journal, will reveal promising experimental results on the controversial, “impossible” EmDrive propulsion system. Now, a NASA Eagleworks paper that could be the December paper, or a draft, has been leaked.

The EmDrive results are often dismissed because they appear to violate the fundamental conservation laws of physics, but possible models for the anomalous thrust effect have been proposed that, while belonging to highly imaginative areas of theoretical physics, could explain the controversial results without violating fundamental conservation laws.

The leaked paper was first shared in the NasaSpaceFlight forum, which is often the primary source of updates for all things EmDrive, and a Reddit thread that was then removed at the request of the Eagleworks authors, then posted with a commentary by tech news site Next Big Future. Of course, the paper could be removed again, and therefore those who want to read it before December might want to download it now.

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