Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 214
Jul 30, 2021
Japan Wants to Build Intercontinental Passenger Spaceships by the Early 2040s
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: military, space travel
What do you think?
The idea of using spaceships to travel from one point on the Earth’s surface to another has been around since at least the 1960s, but the cost and complexity of the idea have meant it’s been little more than a pipe dream.
In principle, the approach isn’t that different from the one used by intercontinental ballistic missiles. A rocket is used to blast the payload, be it a nuclear weapon or a passenger spaceship, on a big looping trajectory into space before re-entering the atmosphere on the other side of the planet.
Continue reading “Japan Wants to Build Intercontinental Passenger Spaceships by the Early 2040s” »
Jul 30, 2021
Elon Musk Shows Off Pic of Monstrous Super Heavy Booster Engine System
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: Elon Musk, space travel
It’s no secret that SpaceX’s Starship Super Heavy Booster will be an absolute beast. The rocket stage, meant to launch the also-huge Starship spacecraft into orbit, will be sporting an outrageous number of individual rocket engines — 29 to be exact — making it one of the biggest rocket boosters in history.
A photo shared by SpaceX CEO Elon Musk today on Twitter shows the sheer scale of the operation — and how far the space company has come in building the first flight-and orbit-worthy prototype.
Jul 30, 2021
NASA has delayed Boeing’s spaceship flight after a Russian module pushed the space station out of position
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space travel
Boeing needs to show that its spaceship is safe for astronauts after failing its last test flight. But Russia’s spacecraft glitch delayed the launch.
Jul 29, 2021
Jeff Bezos Offers NASA $2bn In Exchange For Moon Contract For Blue Origin To Land Astronauts In Space
Posted by Randy Campbell in category: space travel
First of all the title is highly misleading and directly contradicted by the article itself and the actual letter. (He’s not ‘offering’ NASA money he’s voluntarily forgoing payment equal to the SpaceX award for the contract. Now considering the initial pricing was closer to 10 billion that would essentially mean that NASA would be on the hook for about 8 billion but considering the total SpaceX contract is also about 10 billion that still fits into the new Congressional budget, if barely) Secondly considering that Blue Origin is only one of the companies that are cooperating to this bid if the other companies do no agree they he actually WILL be paying those companies to participate. Thirdly while the overall concept was rejected it pays to keep in mind it was ONLY rejected for the price and some questions on the proposed engine development budget so this goes a long way to show they are putting more ‘skin’ in the game than SpaceX. So interesting but highly disappointing ‘take’ on the offer by VT.
Jeff Bezos has offered NASA $2 billion in exchange for a moon contract that will allow Blue Origin to land astronauts in space. The Amazon founder, 57, made history when he went to space last week, and now in an open letter to administrator Bill Nelson on July 26, he…
Jul 29, 2021
Electric boat startup Arc wants to make a big splash
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: space travel, sustainability
But does it want to be the “Tesla of boats?”
A new startup called Arc wants to revolutionize the boating world with a battery-powered craft made for watersports. The small startup, which employs a handful of former SpaceX employees, has designed a sharp but pricey boat with a big battery and an aluminum hull.
Jul 28, 2021
SpaceX: NASA Europa deal reveals the tricky politics of space rockets
Posted by Atanas Atanasov in category: space travel
The future of NASA’s Space Launch System is in question after another contract win for SpaceX.
NASA has selected the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket to launch the Europa Clipper in 2024, putting the future of NASA’s own flagship rocket into question.
Jul 28, 2021
Blue Origin has a secret project named “Jarvis” to compete with SpaceX
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: space travel
How true?
However, after subsequent reporting, I discovered a kernel of truth to the rumors of stainless steel and Blue Origin rockets. Three sources have confirmed to Ars that Blue Origin has started working on a project to develop a fully reusable upper stage for New Glenn, which may potentially use stainless steel propellant tanks.
The primary goal of this change is to bring down the overall launch cost of the New Glenn rocket. The vehicle’s large upper stage, with a 7-meter diameter and two BE-3U engines, is costly, and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos is looking for ways to make the overall rocket more economical.
Continue reading “Blue Origin has a secret project named ‘Jarvis’ to compete with SpaceX” »
Jul 27, 2021
Robots are making progress on space exploration, along with billionaires
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, solar power, space travel, sustainability
What i would suggest is landing Atlas robots in waves on the Moon, the first wave builds a solar panel farm for power, the second repairs the first wave, the third joins the first two to begin building large scale runways, the fourth joins the first three to begin building permanent structures.
The Moon is close enough for teleoperations, and in the 2030s, when we actually do Mars, the AI could repeat the whole thing there.
Continue reading “Robots are making progress on space exploration, along with billionaires” »
Jul 27, 2021
Jeff Bezos offers NASA $2billion in exchange for moon contract
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: space travel
JEFF Bezos has offered NASA $2 billion in exchange for a contract to allow astronauts to land on the moon.
The Amazon founder made his offer to administrator Bill Nelson in an open letter on Monday, a week after his own historic rocket launch.
Billionaire Bezos wrote: Blue Origin is committed to building a future where millions of people live and work in space to benefit the Earth.