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Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 141

Jul 5, 2022

Former SpaceX Rocket Scientist Now Makes High-Tech Pizza

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI, space travel

Making pizza is not rocket science, but for this actual rocket scientist it is now. Benson Tsai is a former SpaceX employee who is now using his skills to launch a new venture: Stellar Pizza, a fully automated, mobile pizza delivery service. When a customer places an order on an app, an algorithm decides when to start making the pizza based on how long it will take to get to the delivery address. Inside Edition Digital’s Mara Montalbano has more.

Jul 4, 2022

In the New Disney Pixar Movie Lightyear, Time Gets Bendy. Is Time Travel Real, or Just Science Fiction?

Posted by in categories: space travel, time travel

One consequence of this is there is no guarantee the clocks will tick at the same rate. In fact, many clocks will tick at different rates.

Even worse, the faster you travel relative to someone else, the slower your clock will tick compared to theirs.

Continue reading “In the New Disney Pixar Movie Lightyear, Time Gets Bendy. Is Time Travel Real, or Just Science Fiction?” »

Jul 3, 2022

Is time travel real? What Pixar’s movie Lightyear shows about Einstein’s theory

Posted by in categories: entertainment, space travel, time travel

Spoiler alert: this article explains a key plot point, but we don’t give away anything you won’t see in trailers. Thanks to reader Florence, 7, for her questions.

At the beginning of the new Disney Pixar film, Lightyear, Buzz Lightyear gets stranded on a dangerous faraway planet with his commanding officer and crew.

Continue reading “Is time travel real? What Pixar’s movie Lightyear shows about Einstein’s theory” »

Jul 2, 2022

Lucy spacecraft has almost completely deployed stuck array

Posted by in category: space travel

Good news for NASA’s Lucy spacecraft, the solar array of which is now almost completely deployed.

Jul 2, 2022

NASA targets late August to early September launch for Artemis 1 Moon mission

Posted by in category: space travel

NASA has set an aggressive launch target for its following the of the SLS rocket that will carry the flight to space. In an interview with , Jim Free, associate administrator with the agency’s Explorations Systems Development program, said this week NASA is working toward an August 23rd to September 6th launch window for Aretmis 1. “That’s the one we’re targeting,” Free told the outlet. “We’d be foolish not to target that right now. We made incredible progress last week.”

For those keeping track, NASA recently the earliest it could get Artemis 1 in space following a successful fueling test of the SLS was between July 26th and August 10th. Instead, NASA selected the second earliest launch window it had open to it.

Before the flight can get underway, technicians must complete final preparations on the SLS rocket, including replacing a seal that led to a hydrogen leak during its June 20th test. NASA began rolling the SLS back to the Kennedy Space Center’s Vehicle Assembly Building, where staff will work on the launch vehicle, on. “I don’t think we’re stretching ourselves to get there,” Free said. “We’re probably pushing ourselves a little bit, but we’re not going to do something stupid.”

Jun 30, 2022

Interstellar Travel Challenges

Posted by in category: space travel

This episode focuses on many of the problems with travel between stars at relativistic velocities, like collision avoidance, radiation, ship geometry, armor, and point-defense.

We will also look at some of the possible engine types and discuss realistic maximum speeds they offer.

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Jun 30, 2022

Generation Ships

Posted by in categories: physics, space travel

Use my link http://www.audible.com/isaac or text “ISAAC” to 500–500 to get a free book including a copy of “Rendevous with Rama” and a 30-day free trial of Audible.
Today we will begin our look at the spaceships we might use for colonizing interstellar space in the future. In order to cover the vast distances between even the nearest stars in our galaxy within the boundaries of known physics, we need vessels able to voyage at high speeds for very long periods of time while carrying everything they need to colonize another solar system, a concept typically known as a space ark or generation ship. We will explore the challenges and options for such a vessel, as well as some alternative approaches to the problem.

“The World, The Flesh And The Devil” by J.d. Bernal:
https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.

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Jun 30, 2022

Life in a Space Colony, ep2: Colony Spaceships

Posted by in category: space travel

This episode is the second of a three-part series focusing more on the specifics of colonization including the human aspect of it. Having laid the groundwork last time, we now ask ourselves what the ships carrying people to new worlds would be like, and what life aboard them would be like.

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Jun 30, 2022

HOW IT WORKS: Nuclear Propulsion

Posted by in categories: chemistry, space travel

The theory, design, and operation of a nuclear propulsion engine advantages are explained verses conventional chemical rockets such as the Saturn V.

Jun 30, 2022

Can Nuclear Propulsion Take Us to Mars?

Posted by in categories: engineering, space travel

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