Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 459
Jul 30, 2016
New Tech Installed on The ISS Set To Form Solar System-Wide ‘Internet’
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: internet, space travel
The ISS has just installed a new technology known as Delay/Disruption Tolerant Networking, the first stage in a new mission that aims to allow the implementation of a Solar System-wide Internet in the near future.
As more investment and innovation is given to space exploration, the ISS is becoming a very busy place. And with Moon colonies and manned missions to Mars looking more and more like reality, the nearly-20 year old station is in dire need of an upgrade.
And its getting one. New technology has been installed in the ISS, and it is designed to form the basis of an internet-style network spanning the whole (or most of the whole) of our cosmic neighborhood. It’s called DTN, or Delay/Disruption Tolerant Networking.
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Jul 29, 2016
Traveling to Mars with Immortal Plasma Rockets
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: engineering, space travel
Mars mission with plasma rockets concept. NASA
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Jul 29, 2016
Russian Deep Space Nuclear Rocket Gets Funding Boost
Posted by Andreas Matt in category: space travel
Russian development of a nuclear rocket engine for deep space exploration to the moon and Mars received a funding boost of about $60 for 2016–2018.
Jul 28, 2016
A new, independent review of the Orion spacecraft is pretty damning
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: space travel
The next president needs to invest the damn money that’s needed to get this entire thing going. No more deferring. No more dithering. If this turns out to be an impossibility, then we should just privatize the entire production and design process, get rid of the red tape, and just get it DONE before we get delay after delay and then, when we finally DO get there, we find the Chinese have already built a damned settlement.
Scientific Method —
A new, independent review of the Orion spacecraft is pretty damning.
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Jul 27, 2016
SpaceX spending about $300 million on Red Dragon mission
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space travel
WASHINGTON — NASA estimates that SpaceX is spending on the order of $300 million on its Red Dragon Mars lander mission, a down payment on the company’s long-term ambitions for human Mars missions.
At a meeting of the NASA Advisory Council’s technology committee in Cleveland July 26, Jim Reuter, deputy associate administrator for programs in NASA’s space technology mission directorate, provided an overview of NASA’s agreement with SpaceX, announced in April, to support that company’s plans for an uncrewed Mars landing mission that could launch as soon as May 2018.
That agreement, in the form of an unfunded Space Act Agreement, does not include any exchange of funds between NASA and SpaceX. Reuter said NASA estimates it will spend approximately $32 million over four years, primarily in the form of NASA personnel providing technical support for SpaceX. About $6 million of that will be spent this fiscal year, he added.
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Jul 27, 2016
SpaceX Might Launch Humans to Space Next Year
Posted by Andreas Matt in category: space travel
Jul 26, 2016
Can a Brain Scan Tell What You’re Thinking? — Pacific Standard
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: mathematics, neuroscience, space travel
Ever really wanted to know what folks truly are thinking about?
A new experiment advances the idea that brain scans can teach us something about how the human mind works.
By Nathan Collins
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Jul 22, 2016
Let’s all move to Mars! The space architects shaping our future
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: food, habitats, space travel, sustainability
We’ve had starchitects. Now we’ve got space architects. Oliver Wainwright meets the people measuring up the red planet for inflatable homes and farms made of moondust concrete.
Jul 21, 2016
Huge sail will power JAXA mission to Trojan asteroids and back
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: robotics/AI, solar power, space travel, sustainability
I wonder, if NASA and/or SpaceX goes to Mars in the 2030’s as planned, by the time the 2050’s roll around a manned attempt to Ceres or Jupiter trojans might be attempted or perhaps an unmanned vehicle made on Mars beats this sail.
Japan’s space agency has its sights on unexplored asteroids as far away as Jupiter, a project that at one level draws on centuries of sail science.
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