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Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 203

Sep 15, 2021

NASA awards SpaceX, Blue Origin, and 3 other companies $146 million in contracts to make moon lander designs

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

Going to hear the SpaceX fans complaining about this but it actually makes perfect sense. SpaceX is already “deep into development” of the vehicle they plan on using for a lander therefore they don’t get as much money as a group that hasn’t started on development yet. Keep in mind that NASA is well aware that SpaceX is already using their money to develop Starship and SuperHeavy so there is no real need to ‘double-down’ on taxpayer development funding to a company that is already spending that money on that development.

One need look no further than the “race” between SpaceX and Boeing over Commercial Crew. Dragon had been in development since 2004 (and funded by NASA since 2006 or cargo and 2010 for crew) while Boeing only started development of Starliner in 2010. SpaceX took 4 years longer than planned for the Cargo version, (2006 scheduled but didn’t fly till 2010) and a full decade after that using the same basic design to fly crewed (2020) Boeing’s Starliner, even if it doesn’t fly this year is still ahead of SpaceX’s development.

It should be rather telling that SpaceX got the lowest award of all the contracts. Starship has always been the ‘outlier’ of the lander designs.

Continue reading “NASA awards SpaceX, Blue Origin, and 3 other companies $146 million in contracts to make moon lander designs” »

Sep 15, 2021

5 stories that explain today’s SpaceX Inspiration4 launch

Posted by in category: space travel

Read these five articles to understand everything about the SpaceX Inspiration4 launch today.

Sep 15, 2021

SpaceX is about to launch 4 inexperienced civilians into Earth’s orbit. Watch it live on Wednesday

Posted by in category: space travel

The Inspiration4 crew members have never been to space. They’ve only trained for five months. Their spaceship has a new glass dome for the views.

Sep 14, 2021

SpaceX: Elon Musk shares photo of drone ship that enables more missions

Posted by in categories: drones, Elon Musk, robotics/AI, space travel

A Shortfall of Gravitas: SpaceX’s new drone ship detailed

The ship supported its first mission on August 29. This was the 23rd Commercial Resupply Services mission, the latest in a series of launches for NASA that sends cargo to the International Space Station.

A Shortfall of Gravitas is a notable upgrade over previous ships. SpaceX explained during the mission launch livestream that it improves over its predecessors with a fully autonomous operation procedure. That means it can travel to sea, find its position, receive the rocket, grab the rocket with the “octograbber” robot and return it to land — all autonomously.

Sep 14, 2021

SpaceX test-fires rocket for Inspiration4, the 1st private orbital mission

Posted by in category: space travel

Current weather forecasts are 80% go for launch!


SpaceX just test-fired the rocket that will take the private Inspiration4 mission on a three-day journey around Earth.

Sep 14, 2021

NASA Small Business Partners Advance Lunar Technologies

Posted by in categories: business, space travel, sustainability

As NASA returns to the Moon via the Artemis program, in an enhanced, sustainable way; the agency has selected five U.S. small businesses to receive a total of nearly $20 million to accelerate the development of novel lunar capabilities.

Sep 13, 2021

Does the universe end? An astronomer weighs in

Posted by in category: space travel

Above the atmosphere is space. It’s called that because it has far fewer molecules, with lots of empty space between them.

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to travel to outer space — and then keep going? What would you find? Scientists like me are able to explain a lot of what you’d see. But there are some things we don’t know yet, like whether space just goes on forever.

Planets, stars, and galaxies.

Sep 13, 2021

The SpaceX Competitor is Printing Its Rockets

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, business, robotics/AI, space travel

California-based startup Relativity Space is manufacturing rockets using giant Westworld-esque 3D printers, a process they say could drastically shorten the rocket-making process from years to weeks. Tim Ellis, the company’s 30-year-old CEO, explains how the high degree of automation in Relativity’s factory has enabled them to build rockets remotely during the Covid-19 pandemic.

#Coronavirus #Space #HelloWorld.
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Continue reading “The SpaceX Competitor is Printing Its Rockets” »

Sep 12, 2021

Look: NASA’s futuristic eVTOL helicopter is ready for flight tests

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI, space travel

NASA and Joby’s eVTOL craft could be the weird plane/chopper fusion of the future.


The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is also America’s civilian aerospace research organization. In that role, it has been instrumental in developing new technologies ranging from rocket engines to aircraft control systems.

Continue reading “Look: NASA’s futuristic eVTOL helicopter is ready for flight tests” »

Sep 12, 2021

SpaceX names 2 new recovery ships after NASA astronauts

Posted by in category: space travel

The recovery ships “Bob” and “Doug” are named after the first crew SpaceX launched for NASA.


SpaceX’s new recovery ships “Bob” and “Doug” sailed into Port Canaveral this month and are named for NASA astronauts.