Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 923

Jan 17, 2017

Moontopia competition-winners show nine visions for lunar architecture

Posted by in category: space

Nine space-age designs have been revealed as the winners of the Moontopia competition, which asked architects and designers to visualise life on the moon.

Entrants to the Moontopia competition were asked to draw up plans for a self-sufficient lunar colony for living, working, researching and space tourism.

One winner and eight runners up were selected from hundreds of proposals submitted to the competition, which was organised by architecture and design magazine Eleven, and ran from August to November 2016.

Continue reading “Moontopia competition-winners show nine visions for lunar architecture” »

Jan 16, 2017

An Enormous Atmospheric Anomaly Has Been Spotted On Venus

Posted by in category: space

Looks like some ungodly big pressure wave.


Using the Akatsuki spacecraft, Japanese scientists have detected a large, bow-shaped anomaly in the upper atmosphere of Venus. Strangely, the 6,200-mile-long structure is refusing to budge despite the 225 mile-per-hour winds that surround it.

Read more

Jan 16, 2017

3D printing makes controversial Moon Express mission to mine lunar materials possible

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, space

California-based commercial aerospace company Moon Express, are on track to send their Electron rocket to the Moon in 2017. The Electron is propelled by 3D printed engines made by Rocket Lab, headquartered in Los Angeles. The project is designed for Google’s modern-day space race: the Lunar X Prize.

3D printed engines

Nine liquid-propellant Rutherford engines are behind the Electron. The rocket engines, the first to use 3D printing for the all core parts, use kerosene and liquid oxygen (LOX) for fuel.

Continue reading “3D printing makes controversial Moon Express mission to mine lunar materials possible” »

Jan 15, 2017

Asteroid Prospects: Facts & Future of Space Mining

Posted by in categories: futurism, space

By Kelsey Tollefson | Executive Editor John Lenker

The notion of harvesting resources from extraterrestrial sources is not a new one. The lure of untold bounties—orbiting just out of reach—has prompted generations of poets and presidents alike to expound upon the potential applications of space mining. These days, “space mining” is no longer a mere pipe dream.

Read more

Jan 13, 2017

Titan Touchdown

Posted by in category: space

If you feel no awe when watching this video, then you are already dead.


On Jan. 14, 2005, ESA’s Huygens probe made its descent to the surface of Saturn’s hazy moon, Titan. Carried to Saturn by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, Huygens made the most distant landing ever on another world, and the only landing on a body in the outer solar system. This video uses actual images taken by the probe during its two-and-a-half hour fall under its parachutes.

Continue reading “Titan Touchdown” »

Jan 13, 2017

This Remarkable Robot Hand Is Worthy of Luke Skywalker

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI, space, transhumanism

Most of today’s robot hands can perform easy tasks. They’re uber-practical grippers, simple and useful. But is it really so much to ask for robotic masterworks as dextrous as Luke Skywalker’s bionic hand in Star Wars? In short, yes, yes it is. It might have been a long time ago in a galaxy far far away—but most Star Wars tech is beyond us.

Still, it’s hard not to get in a Star Wars state of mind watching this beautiful robot hand engineered by Yale postdoc Joseph (Zhe) Xu and the University of Washington’s Emanuel Todorov.

Continue reading “This Remarkable Robot Hand Is Worthy of Luke Skywalker” »

Jan 13, 2017

New patent granted to 3D printed hybrid rocket fuel engines for low cost access to space

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, space

Rocket Crafters, Inc (RCI) have been granted a patent that will allow the mass-production of an expendable 3D printed hydrid rocket engine.

Read more

Jan 11, 2017

Confirmed: We Really are ‘Star Stuff’

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, particle physics, space

Scientist Carl Sagan said many times that “we are star stuff,” from the nitrogen in our DNA, the calcium in our teeth, and the iron in our blood.

It is well known that most of the essential elements of life are truly made in the stars. Called the “CHNOPS elements” – carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorous, and sulfur – these are the building blocks of all life on Earth. Astronomers have now measured of all of the CHNOPS elements in 150,000 stars across the Milky Way, the first time such a large number of stars have been analyzed for these elements.

“For the first time, we can now study the distribution of elements across our Galaxy,” says Sten Hasselquist of New Mexico State University. “The elements we measure include the atoms that make up 97% of the mass of the human body.”

Read more

Jan 10, 2017

Humans living on the MOON? Scientists find ideal location for LIFE on the rock’s DARK SIDE

Posted by in category: space

I do know that China has already made plans to mine the dark side of the Moon. And, China is launching their 1st ship this year; so this is going to get interesting.


NASA scientists exploring the dark side of the moon have revealed an ideal location for a permanent base on the rock.

Read more

Jan 9, 2017

Very Large Telescope joins Breakthrough search for Alpha Centauri’s planets

Posted by in categories: innovation, space

One of the most powerful observing instruments on Earth, the Very Large Telescope, will join the search for potentially habitable planets around the Alpha Centauri star system.

The survey will take place in 2019 under the terms of an agreement signed by the European Southern Observatory, which operates the VLT in Chile, and by the Breakthrough Initiatives.

Continue reading “Very Large Telescope joins Breakthrough search for Alpha Centauri’s planets” »

Page 923 of 1,032First920921922923924925926927Last