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Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 124

Jan 9, 2022

SpaceX Closed 2021 With a Bang — And 2022 Could Be Downright Explosive

Posted by in category: space travel

A great summary of everything SpaceX 2021, along with everything SpaceX to come in 2022.


You can expect blowups along the way, but you can also expect to see the starship fly this year.

Jan 8, 2022

A New Wave of Space Companies Is Coming. Can It Help Life on Earth?

Posted by in categories: economics, space travel

We’re moving past the bottleneck of available space launches.

The bottleneck nature of space launches is beginning to change.

Continue reading “A New Wave of Space Companies Is Coming. Can It Help Life on Earth?” »

Jan 6, 2022

NASA’s first Artemis moon mission will have a virtual astronaut: Amazon’s Alexa

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space travel

NASA’s Artemis 1 mission, slated for take off as soon as this March, aims to send an Orion spacecraft around the moon. The cabin will be largely empty, save for an a interactive tablet that has been dubbed “Callisto,” which will sit propped up to face an astronaut mannequin. Callisto is essentially a touch-screen device that features reconfigured versions of Alexa, Amazon’s voice assistant, and Cisco’s teleconferencing platform WebEx.

Among the many aspects that will be closely watched on the ground — at least by the group behind this Alexa experiment — is how the virtual assistant performs in space. And if nothing else, it’ll be some well-placed advertising.

It’s all part of a collaboration between Amazon, (AMZN) Cisco (CSCO) 0, and Lockheed Martin (LMT) 0, which built the Orion capsule for NASA. Lockheed approached the other two companies with the idea of developing a virtual assistant about three years ago, the companies said, and they are paying the full cost of including the virtual assistant on the Artemis 1 mission. Lockheed is also reimbursing NASA for any help the agency has lent on this project through an arrangement called a Space Act Agreement, which allows the space agency to be compensated for expertise or resources it gives to companies working on certain space-related projects.

Jan 6, 2022

SpaceX Mars City: Launch schedule, key build dates, and how to get there

Posted by in category: space travel

Musk plans to build a self-sustaining city on Mars.


Here is what you need to know about Musk’s mission.

Continue reading “SpaceX Mars City: Launch schedule, key build dates, and how to get there” »

Jan 6, 2022

Astronomers Discover One of The Biggest Structures Ever Seen in The Milky Way

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space travel

Roughly 13.8 billion years ago, our Universe was born in a massive explosion that gave rise to the first subatomic particles and the laws of physics as we know them.

About 370,000 years later, hydrogen had formed, the building block of stars, which fuse hydrogen and helium in their interiors to create all the heavier elements. While hydrogen remains the most pervasive element in the Universe, it can be difficult to detect individual clouds of hydrogen gas in the interstellar medium (ISM).

Continue reading “Astronomers Discover One of The Biggest Structures Ever Seen in The Milky Way” »

Jan 5, 2022

SpaceX and others set a staggering spaceflight record in 2021

Posted by in categories: government, space travel

NASA, SpaceX, the Chinese government, and others helped make it a bumper year for space.


Rocket Lab, SpaceX, NASA and others helped propel the global spaceflight industry to a record year — and it could beat that record this year.

Jan 4, 2022

We’re Losing A Planet: Say Goodbye To Venus, Now A Slim Crescent Sinking In The West

Posted by in category: space travel

Planet-spotting is all about perspective.

From where we stand in our orbit of the Sun the closest planet to us, Venus, will come to what astronomers call inferior conjunction on Sunday, January 9.

After over six months of shining brightly in the west in the post-sunset sky in its apparition as the “Evening Star,” on that day Venus will finally disappear from sight.… See more.

Jan 4, 2022

SpaceX Starship prototype completes fourth static fire

Posted by in category: space travel

Source: Teslarati Date Published: 01/03/2022.

Jan 3, 2022

The curious story of Elon Musk’s Tesla stock sales and SpaceX’s fundraising

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, internet, space travel, sustainability

It looks like Elon is putting more of his money into SpaceX. This makes sense as he has tons of money and SpaceX seems to have more growth potential than Tesla because his Starlink and Starship will both be very hard for other companies to compete against. (Just the amount of capital it would take to make competing products is staggering.)

I’m not saying that Tesla won’t be worth $10 trillion one day, I’m just saying SpaceX has more growth potential. Elon seems to agree.


What’s Elon Musk doing with the billions he’s collected in the past two months from selling shares in Tesla?

Continue reading “The curious story of Elon Musk’s Tesla stock sales and SpaceX’s fundraising” »

Jan 1, 2022

Lockheed’s LS-200 Star Clipper Spaceplane a Space Shuttle alternative

Posted by in category: space travel

Lockheed’s Star Clipper was a proposed Earth-to-orbit spaceplane based on a large lifting body spacecraft and a wrap-around drop tank. Originally proposed during a USAF program in 1966, the basic Star Clipper concept lived on during the early years of the NASA Space Shuttle program, and as that project evolved, in a variety of new versions like the LS-200.

The LS-200 was very similar to the earlier version, it was smaller overall, The M-1 engines were replaced with the Space Shuttle Main Engines.