Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 409
Aug 1, 2018
NASA is naming 8 astronauts to fly SpaceX and Boeing’s new spaceships — here’s how to watch the announcement live
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
NASA is naming eight astronauts who will fly the first test missions on commercial spaceships designed by Boeing and SpaceX. The space agency is broadcasting live video — here’s how to watch the NASA announcement.
Aug 1, 2018
Work begins on rocket engines for SLS flights a decade from now
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
Long lead time
This timeline represents quite a long lead-up for the engines and the fifth flight. Nominally, NASA now plans to make the first SLS launch in June 2020, although that date may slip into 2021 or later if further technical or hardware problems arise with the new rocket. Eventually, NASA wants to get to a cadence of one flight every year of the rocket, but that is unlikely to happen right away. Therefore, the fifth flight of the SLS rocket is unlikely before the second half of the 2020s.
There is also some question as to whether the rocket will actually make multiple flights. By the mid-2020s, Blue Origin’s large New Glenn booster should be flying. Additionally, SpaceX’s larger Big Falcon Rocket may also have begun making test flights by then. Both of these boosters would offer NASA significant lift with privately developed, reusable rockets at a fraction of the cost of the SLS rocket.
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Aug 1, 2018
NASA is about to announce the 8 astronauts who will fly SpaceX and Boeing’s spaceships for the first time — here’s who they might be
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: government, space travel
Here’s who we think they might be:
NASA is about to name the first eight astronauts ever to fly Boeing and SpaceX’s brand-new spaceships.
The Commercial Crew Program, as it’s called, is a spaceflight competition that NASA started about two years before retiring its space shuttles in July 2011. The goal: ensure NASA astronauts can access the International Space Station and end US reliance on Russia’s increasingly expensive Soyuz spaceships to get there.
Jul 30, 2018
A Moon For All Mankind
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: bioengineering, space travel, virtual reality
Few in life get to walk on the Moon. Samsung says, do what you can’t. Working with creative agency Iris and engineering experts Mannetron, Framestore proudly joined Samsung’s mission to bring space travel to all, in the approach to the 50th anniversary of the first lunar landing. ‘A Moon For All Mankind’ is the world’s first lunar gravity simulation VR experience, created in collaboration with NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC), using the Samsung Gear VR and a custom-built rig. Having launched under embargo at the 2018 Winter Olympics and at Mobile World Congress, July sees the experience land publicly at Samsung 837, in New York City.
Jul 29, 2018
What humans must do to make Mars home
Posted by Alberto Lao in categories: habitats, space travel
Jul 29, 2018
SpaceX Killer — The Great Rocket Race | MUST WATCH
Posted by Montie Adkins in category: space travel
A very nice summary on everyone in the new space race.
Just a few months ago, SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy created History by not only sending a car to Outer Space but also landing the Boosters with Pin point accuracy. It may seem that the Future of Space Race will be dominated by SpaceX, or is it?
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Jul 23, 2018
NASA Funding Project To Turn Asteroids Into Spaceships: Report
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: 3D printing, robotics/AI, space travel
NASA has recently announced it would give funds to a California-based 3D printing company for finding ways to turn asteroids into giant, autonomous spacecrafts, which could fly to outposts in space, the media reported.
Made In Space’s project, known as RAMA (Reconstituting Asteroids into Mechanical Automata), could one day enable space colonization by helping make off-Earth manufacturing efficient and economically viable, Space.com reported.
The company plans to use 3D printing to turn the asteroids into self-flying vehicles by 2030.
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Jul 22, 2018
The Rocket Man Giving SpaceX a Run for Its Money
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: economics, space travel
Peter Beck is the real life rocket man. He loves rockets so much that he started Rocket Lab, a space startup specializing in lightweight, cost-effective commercial launch services. His goal is to make launching rockets into orbit as common as picking up your mail, and he’s making progress.
Video by Matt Goldman.
Jul 22, 2018
Home: Today, all the action beyond low earth orbit is telecom, government, and military
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: computing, government, military, space travel
Tomorrow it’s commercial tourism, space energy, space data centers, in-space manufacturing and resource exploration & utilization. Companies all over the world are creating incredible future technologies that will one day operate in deep space. But one question largely goes unanswered: how will they get there? We will take them.
Chemical and ion electrical propulsion have their limitations. We’re building breakthrough transportation technology to propel the next generation of space endeavors more efficiently, safely, and inexpensively than ever before.