Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 103
Jan 27, 2023
NASA just test fired a rocket designed to power long-term Moon trips
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: space travel
A revolutionary new form of rocket has just been tested by NASA. Called RDRE, this new propulsion device could make long-term Moon missions viable.
NASA’s propulsion development engineers have built and tested the agency’s first full-scale rotating detonation rocket engine, or RDRE for short. This advanced rocket engine design could change how propulsion systems are built in the future in a big way.
Continue reading “NASA just test fired a rocket designed to power long-term Moon trips” »
Jan 27, 2023
Why Are We Sending a Plastic-Eating Enzyme to Space? | Mashable
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: bioengineering, health, space travel
On Nov. 26, 2022 a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket departed from departed from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida to deliver supplies to the International Space Station. Among the 7,700 pounds of cargo on board, it is safe to say that the smallest delivery that day were a bunch of frozen bacteria.
In an interdisciplinary collaboration, a group of scientists from MIT Media Lab, NREL, Seed Health and others, bioengineered a plastic-eating bacteria to be able to upcycle plastics. Mashable met with some of them to find out how the bacteria works, why it was it was sent to space, and how it can help humanity tackle plastic pollution in space as well as on Earth.
Continue reading “Why Are We Sending a Plastic-Eating Enzyme to Space? | Mashable” »
Jan 27, 2023
NASA and DARPA will test nuclear thermal engines for crewed missions to Mars
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: chemistry, space travel
Nuclear thermal rocket engines could help get astronauts to Mars more quickly than by chemical propulsion methods. NASA and DARPA are working on nuclear thermal propulsion tech that they hope to test as soon as 2027.
Jan 26, 2023
Asteroid mining: SpaceX will help a startup launch operations in 2023
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: materials, space travel
The space tech startup, AstroForge, hopes to complete two proof-of-concept missions this year using SpaceX rockets.
In what might be a groundbreaking moment in space industry history, a new startup plans to launch not one but two space missions this year. This might not sound like a big deal, but the company wants to go into space to find and use minerals from asteroids and other deep-space objects.
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Jan 25, 2023
The Death of Death during the coming #DLD Tel Aviv Innovation Festival in Israel. Top news at #i24
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: biotech/medical, economics, engineering, singularity, space travel, transhumanism
José Cordeiro, PhD, talking about his international bestseller “The Death of Death” during the coming DLD Tel Aviv Innovation Festival in Israel. Top news at i24 news discussing about aging as the “mother” of all chronic diseases!
José Cordeiro is an international fellow of the World Academy of Art and Science, vicechair of HumanityPlus, director of The Millennium Project, founding faculty at Singularity University in NASA Research Park, Silicon Valley, and former director of the Club of Rome (Venezuela Chapter), the World Transhumanist Association and the Extropy Institute.
Jan 24, 2023
Margaret Hamilton: Pioneering Software Engineer Who Saved the Moon Landing
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: engineering, space travel
We might all have been in a situation where we had to put our trust in our work to hold up and do what it needed to do, but Margaret Hamilton’s work was particularly important — it was responsible for putting Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon in July 1969.
When warning lights started going off in the middle of the Eagle module’s descent toward the lunar surface, NASA faced a tough decision: continue with the landing or abort.
Continue reading “Margaret Hamilton: Pioneering Software Engineer Who Saved the Moon Landing” »
Jan 24, 2023
With Starship testing, SpaceX moves one step closer to making science fiction a reality
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
SpaceX is poised to conduct a wet dress rehearsal of the Starship launch system from its Starbase site in southeastern Texas, a major milestone in CEO Elon Musk’s quest to turn long-haul interplanetary transportation from science fiction to reality.
It’s the strongest signal yet that Starship’s first orbital flight test could well and truly be imminent. The wet dress is a critical series of prelaunch tests that includes propellant loading of both the upper stage and booster, and a run-through of countdown to around T-10 seconds, or just before engine ignition. If no major issues crop up during the testing, the next step would be “de-stacking,” or the separation of the Starship second stage and Super Heavy booster. That would be followed by a full static fire test, where engineers would light up all 33 of the booster’s Raptor 2 engines. The launch system would then be re-stacked before the first orbital flight test.
This could all take place in a matter of weeks — March is not off the table for the orbital flight test — but that’s assuming that everything goes well and no major mishaps take place (they’re not unheard of). It also assumes that the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, the body that regulates commercial launches, issues SpaceX the all-important launch license fairly soon. The FAA has been basically mum about the status of its evaluation of SpaceX’s plans, though it’s been conducting extensive assessments of the Starship launch program for some time.
Jan 22, 2023
SpaceX’s next-generation Starship rocket could soar to orbit as soon as next month
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
Elon Musk said the private space firm has “a real shot at late February” for the orbital launch of Starship.
We might finally see SpaceX’s Starship soar to orbit next month. SpaceX’s orbital launch of its fully reusable Starship rocket is arguably the most exciting upcoming space mission of the year. And we may not have to wait very long to see it take to the skies.
Starship could fly to orbit for the first time as soon as late February, though March is more likely, according to an update from SpaceX CEO Elon Musk via Twitter.