Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 469
Aug 22, 2016
Venus’ ‘Twin Planet’ Could Still Have Oxygen, Scientists Say
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: alien life, space travel
# Venus # Oxygen – Venus’ ‘Twin Planet’ Could Still Have Oxygen, Scientists Say : Nine months ago, astronomers announced that they were able to discover a planet that is said to be a twin to Venus. Today, it seems that a new study raises the possibility of the said planet to have oxygen in its atmosphere – don’t mistake it for the next livable planet though – it is said to have hellish temperatures, which automatically rules out the possibility of life.
Dubbed the GJ 1132b, IFL Science noted that it is larger than Earth in size and mass. Temperature-wise, it is considerably hot at 120 to 320 degrees Celsius, but it is still considered cooler than most of the rocky planets previously detected.
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Aug 22, 2016
A lost spacecraft is talking to NASA again after nearly 2 years in the void
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: robotics/AI, space travel
Wild stuff.
Somewhere on the other side of the sun, almost directly opposite to Earth, a NASA spacecraft has drifted aimlessly through the void since Oct. 1, 2014, unable to establish contact with our planet.
At least that was the depressing situation until Sunday night.
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Aug 22, 2016
NASA Funds Plan to Turn Used Rocket Fuel Tanks Into Space Habitats
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: habitats, space travel
The first stage launches the rocket off of the pad and continues firing for about four minutes. Once the first stage is out of fuel, it separates, and if it’s a SpaceX Falcon 9, flies back home to be reused. If it’s anything else, including the Atlas V, the first stage crash lands in the ocean and sinks. Meanwhile, the second stage fires up its own engine (or engines) to boost the payload the rest of the way into orbit. On the Atlas V, the second stage is called Centaur. Once Centaur gets its payload where it needs to go, it separates, and then suicides down into Earth’s atmosphere.
Getting a payload into space is so expensive because you have to build up this huge and complicated rocket, with engines and guidance systems and fuel tanks and stuff, and then you basically use it for like 15 minutes and throw it all away. This is why SpaceX is trying so hard to recover the first stage of the Falcon 9. But what about the second stage? You’ve got a whole bunch of hardware that made it to orbit, and when getting stuff to orbit costs something like $2,500 per kilogram, you then tell it to go it burn itself up in the atmosphere, because otherwise it’s just useless space junk.
Aug 19, 2016
Be the first to comment on “Synthetic Biology: We Will Grow Entire Cities Out Of Living Organisms”
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, education, environmental, robotics/AI, space travel
Hmmmm.
Technocrat scientists believe they can ‘code’ any kind of future they want, but what about what everyone else wants? These are the overlords of Technocracy who believe that we should just ‘trust them’ to build Utopia. ⁃ TN Editor.
Aug 19, 2016
How Starshot will get us to Alpha Centauri in 20 years
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: innovation, space travel
Travelling into the darkest depths of the universe could soon be as easy as flicking on a switch, or at least a switch for a giant laser system that will fire a spacecraft at 150m kmph to Alpha Centauri.
Back in April 2016, the philanthropic research group Breakthrough Initiatives announced it was putting millions of dollars into developing a spacecraft capable of reaching Alpha Centauri in the next 20 years.
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Aug 19, 2016
Could Proxima Centauri Be Our Interstellar Getaway?
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space travel
Aug 18, 2016
‘Great Leap Forward’: Chinese Satellite Uses Quantum Teleportation Technology
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: quantum physics, space travel
Hmmm; sure hope others catch up soon.
China has launched a satellite that it claims has teleportation-like quantum communication capabilities.
While humanity may be a long way from “beaming” humans aboard a starship, scientists have made major strides in teleporting information. In March, German physicists made major advances in “quantum teleportation,” transmitting data across physical distance without a time delay.
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Aug 18, 2016
Beam My DNA Up to Space, Scotty! New Project Aims to ‘Immortalize’ Humanity
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, space travel
A new spin on DNA in space.
A new crowdfunding project could see humanity immortalized in space. Voices of Humanity, has one key goal and that is to help everyone on planet Earth to engage directly in space exploration.
The Voices of Humanity project is led by Professor Philip Lubin from Orlando University has developed the idea in the hope it will help them to develop a first generation laser-driven small spacecraft as part of NASA’s program to explore interstellar flight.
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Aug 18, 2016
Artificial Gravity In Space For Mice? Multi-Generational Study Concept
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: health, space travel
NASA’s Multigenerational Independent Colony for Extraterrestrial Habitation, Autonomy, and Behavior Health (MICEHAB) would give scientists the ability to study the effects of long-duration space exploration on mice.
Credit: NASA Langley Research Center