Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 411
Jun 20, 2018
Astronauts eject space junk demo mission
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: robotics/AI, space travel
The £13m RemoveDebris spacecraft was taken to the ISS in April and stored onboard ahead of Wednesday’s release.
The spacecraft was pushed out of an airlock where a robotic arm then picked it up gave it a gentle nudge down and away from the 400km-high lab.
In the process, RemoveDebris became the largest satellite to ever be deployed from the International Space Station. The time was about 12:35 BST.
Jun 18, 2018
Interplanetary Challenge
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: robotics/AI, space travel
CADET EXPLORER MISSION
Let Bill Nye and Robert Picardo take you on a journey through the future of space exploration and artificial intelligence. Each week they will show us a different space-themed topic and reveal how AI can help us reach the stars.
Jun 17, 2018
Astronaut Chris Hadfield says the rockets from NASA, SpaceX, and Blue Origin won’t take people to Mars
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: futurism, space travel
Sorry, Elon.
Chris Hadfield, a former astronaut, says the future rockets and spaceships of NASA, SpaceX, and Blue Origin would be too risky to get people to and from Mars. He thinks we need some possibly “outlandish” solutions for space travel to make round-trip travel to the red planet practical.
Jun 17, 2018
Combining Laser And Particle Beams For Interstellar Travel
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: engineering, particle physics, space travel
By jan mcharg, texas A&M university college of engineering
A new technology combining a laser beam and a particle beam for interstellar propulsion could pave the way for space exploration into the vast corners of our universe. This is the focus of PROCSIMA, a new research proposal by Dr. Chris Limbach and Dr. Ken Hara, assistant professors in the Department of Aerospace Engineering at Texas A&M University.
NASA has chosen the proposal “PROCSIMA: Diffractionless Beam Propulsion for Breakthrough Interstellar Missions,” for the 2018 NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) phase 1 study. PROCSIMA stands for Photon-paRticle Optically Coupled Soliton Interstellar Mission Accelerator, and is meant to evoke the idea that interstellar travel is not so far away.
Continue reading “Combining Laser And Particle Beams For Interstellar Travel” »
Jun 17, 2018
How Human Hibernation Will Soon Get Us to Mars
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: entertainment, space travel
Jun 17, 2018
The incredible career of NASA’s Peggy Whitson, who applied to become an astronaut 10 times before she broke the American record for space travel
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: food, space travel, sustainability
She retired from NASA on Friday after blazing a trail for countless female astronauts.
NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, the 58-year-old from Iowa farm country who spent a record-breaking 665 days in space, retired from the space agency on Friday.
“I have hit my radiation limit,” Whitson told Business Insider during a recent interview. “So not going into space with NASA anymore.”
Jun 16, 2018
A New Study Details Everything That Would Be Needed For An Interstellar Journey To Proxima Centauri
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: particle physics, space travel
Scientists have determined the minimum amount of crew members needed for a 6,300-year journey to Proxima b.
A team of French scientists have recently published a new study detailing everything that would be needed if humans were to one day make the long interstellar journey to Proxima Centauri to start a new life and civilization. The research went to great lengths to determine the correct amount of people that would ensure a successful voyage to Proxima b.
The study was conducted by particle physicist Dr. Camille Beluffi and Dr. Frederic Marin from the Astronomical Observatory of Strasbourg and marks the second study conducted on such an interstellar journey to Proxima b, as ScienceAlert reported.
Jun 15, 2018
Smart Robots Are the Secret to Spaceflight’s Future
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, robotics/AI, space travel
https://youtube.com/watch?v=wvwXgZhrr-s
A spacecraft, spinning in Earth’s orbit, reaches inside itself. One of its four arms pulls out a length of polymer pipe that has been 3D-printed inside the body of the machines. All four of the spacecraft’s arms are securing pieces together as it builds a new space station right there in orbit.
This surreal project, called Archinaut, is the future vision of space manufacturing company Made In Space. The company promises a future of large imaging arrays, kilometer-scale communications tools, and big space stations all built off-planet by smart robots.
Continue reading “Smart Robots Are the Secret to Spaceflight’s Future” »
Jun 15, 2018
Space catapult startup gets $40 MILLION investment
Posted by Carse Peel in category: space travel
A Silicon Valley startup has devised an ingenious way of sending rockets into space.
Dubbed SpinLaunch, the firm wants to blast tiny payloads into orbit atop miniature rockets.
Continue reading “Space catapult startup gets $40 MILLION investment” »