Engine test! đ„ đ At Stennis Space Center, weâre about to fire up the RS-25 engine for NASAâs Space Launch System rocket, which will power missions to the Moon and Mars. Tune in at https://go.nasa.gov/2Q9LmFc
Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 393
Oct 30, 2018
Last night, #ParkerSolarProbe surpassed 153,454 miles per hour becoming fastest-ever human-made object relative to the Sun
Posted by Michael Lance in category: space travel
This breaks the record set by the German-American Helios 2 mission in April 1976. The spacecraft will continue to break its own records, achieving a top speed of about 430,000 miles per hour in 2024. Catch up: https://go.nasa.gov/2qjOraI
Oct 29, 2018
Weâre getting closer to âtouchingâ the Sun
Posted by Michael Lance in category: space travel
ParkerSolarProbe became the closest-ever spacecraft to the Sun when it passed within 26.55 million miles of the Sunâs surface. Find out more: https://go.nasa.gov/2Q4QB9p
Oct 29, 2018
NASAâs Hubble Space Telescope Back Online, Continues Cosmic Research
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
Systems are a go for NASAâs Hubble Space Telescope after the successful recovery of a backup gyroscope replaced one that failed earlier this month.
The spacecraft entered safe mode on Oct. 5, remaining in a stable configuration for three weeks; HST returned to normal operations late on Friday.
It completed science observations the next day, using the Wide Field Camera 3 instrument to capture infrared wavelengths of a distant, star-forming galaxy.
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Oct 29, 2018
SpaceX confirms initial BFR spaceship flight tests will occur in South Texas
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
SpaceX has confirmed that the two large propellant tanks now present at its Boca Chica, Texas facilities will likely to be the last major ground tanks needed to enable the first test flights of the upper stage of its next-gen BFR rocket, known as the Big Falcon Spaceship (BFS).
Expected to begin as soon as late 2019, SpaceX executives have recently reiterated plans for a campaign of hop tests for the first full-scale spaceship prototype, in which the ship will follow in the footsteps of its Falcon 9-based Grasshopper and F9R predecessors.
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Oct 29, 2018
Russia âtestsâ key piece of nuclear space engine to revolutionize long-range missions
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: nuclear energy, space travel
Nuclear engine (aka YaEDU):
A key component of Russiaâs future nuclear space propulsion system, which may revolutionize long-range exploration of the solar system, has been successfully tested, RIA Novosti reported.
Oct 28, 2018
Blue Origin will be Landing its Rockets on a Used Cargo Ship. Itâll Get Converted in Time for First Flights in 2021
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
https://youtube.com/watch?v=BTEhohh6eYk
Blue Origin recently received a large cargo ship, which they will retool to retrieve the first stage of their reusable New Glenn rocket.
Oct 28, 2018
Mars Colony Prize â Design the First Human Settlement on Mars
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, economics, food, robotics/AI, space travel
The Mars Society is holding a special contest called The Mars Colony Prize for designing the best plan for a Mars colony of 1000 people. There will be a prize of $10,000 for first place, $5,000 for second and $2500 for third. In addition, the best 20 papers will be published in a book â âMars Colonies: Plans for Settling the Red Planet.â
The Mars colony should be self-supporting to the maximum extent possible â i.e. relying on a minimum mass of imports from Earth. In order to make all the things that people need on Earth takes a lot more than 1000 people, so you will need to augment both the amount and diversity of available labor power through the use of robots and artificial intelligence. You will need to be able to both produce essential bulk materials like food, fabrics, steel, glass, and plastics on Mars, and fabricate them into useful structures, so 3D printing and other advanced fabrication technologies will be essential. The goal is to have the colony be able to produce all the food, clothing, shelter, power, common consumer products, vehicles, and machines for 1000 people, with only the minimum number of key components, such as advanced electronics needing to be imported from Earth.
As noted, imports will always be necessary, so you will need to think of useful exports â of either material or intellectual products that the colony could produce and transport or transit back to Earth to pay for them. In the future, it can be expected that the cost of shipping goods from Earth to Mars will be $500/kg and the cost of shipping goods from Mars to Earth will be $200/kg. Under these assumptions, your job is to design an economy, cost it out, and show that after a certain initial investment in time and money, that it can become successful.
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Oct 26, 2018
Defectors from SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Tesla are developing a remarkable technology called âStargateâ to help colonize other planets
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: 3D printing, space travel
While SpaceX works on giant reusable rockets to reach Mars, other companies are working on technologies to keep colonists alive on the red planet. Relativity Space has made the worldâs largest metal 3D printer, called Stargate, to print rockets, tools, and other useful objects off-Earth.
Oct 24, 2018
Jeff Bezosâ Blue Origin ship to be used for rocket landings docked at Port of Pensacola
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
The Port of Pensacola has a 600-foot visitor that will soon be a landing platform for rockets, but questions remain as to why it is there and for how long it will remain.