NASA plans on using million in stimulus funds to seed development of a commercial passenger transportation service to space. Potential space taxi inventors have 45 days to submit their proposals. The proposals will be competitively evaluated and the winners will be announced by the end of September. It is unclear what other Commodore 64 games NASA plans on making a reality, but I hope Arkanoid makes the short list.
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NASA Wants To Fund Space Taxis
August 14th, 2009Nearby, Recent Interplanetary Collision Inferred
August 14th, 2009The Bad Astronomer writes about a new discovery by the Spitzer Space Telescope, which detected signs of an interplanetary smashup only 100 light-years from here, and only a few thousand years ago. There’s a NASA-produced animation of the collision between a Mercury-sized planet and a moon-sized impactor. The collision’s aftermath was detected by the presence of what are essentially glass shards in orbit around the star. Here’s NASA’s writeup.
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Strange New Objects Seen In Saturn’s Rings
August 14th, 2009Every 15 Earth years, Saturn has its equinox — the time during which its rotational axis is perpendicular to the rays from the sun, so that the sun is always directly “overhead” of Saturn’s equator. This is significant because Saturn’s rings orbit over the equator, so during the equinox, light from the sun hits them edge-on. This means that any objects wider than the rings, or orbiting above or below them, cast long shadows and are much easier to see. For the first time, we’re able to get detailed images of these objects, thanks to Cassini. A moonlet, perhaps 1,300 feet in diameter, has been discovered in the B-ring, and the Bad Astronomy blog points out another object that seems to be bursting through the F-ring. Quoting: “The upward-angled structure is definitely real, as witnessed by the shadow it’s casting on the ring material to the lower left. And what’s with the bright patch right where this object seems to have slammed into the rings? Did it shatter millions of icy particles, revealing their shinier interior material, making them brighter? Clearly, something awesome and amazing happened here.
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NASA’s New Telescope Finds Exoplanet Atmosphere
August 14th, 2009celticryan writes "NASA’s new telescope has made a promising discovery. ‘As NASA’s first exoplanets mission, Kepler has made a dramatic entrance on the planet-hunting scene,’ said Jon Morse, director of the Science Mission Directorate’s Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. ‘Detecting this planet’s atmosphere in just the first 10 days of data is only a taste of things to come. The planet hunt is on!’"
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NASA To Invest In Commercial Crew Concepts
August 14th, 2009xp65 writes "Today NASA released information regarding its intention to invest million in commercial crew concepts. This new program, known as the Commercial Crew Development or ‘CCDev,’ represents a new milestone in the development of an orbital commercial human spaceflight sector. By maturing ‘the design and development of commercial crew spaceflight concepts and associated enabling technologies and capabilities,’ the program will allow several companies to move a few steps forward towards the ultimate goal of full demonstration of commercial human spaceflight to orbit."
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NASA Offers $1.5 Million For 200MPG Aircraft
August 14th, 2009coondoggie writes to mention that NASA’s Green Flight Challenge is offering up to .5 million for an aircraft that can hit 200 passenger miles per gallon while maintaining 100 mph on a 200 mile flight. “The Challenge is intended to bring about the development and convergence of new technologies and innovations that can improve the community acceptance, efficiency, door-to-door speed, utility, environmental-friendliness, affordability and safety of future air vehicles, CAFÉ stated. Such technologies and innovations include, but are not limited to, bio-fueled propulsion, breakthroughs in batteries, motors, fuel-cells and ultra-capacitors that enable electric-powered flight, advanced high lift technologies for very short takeoff and landing distances, ultra-quiet propellers, enhanced structural efficiency by advances in material science and nano-technology and safety features such as vehicle parachutes and air-bags.”
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Electronic Armageddon, and No Electricity Either
August 14th, 2009Smart grid technology is a hot issue on Capitol Hill, but some are raising questions about the idea. In recent days we’ve discussed the smart grid’s potential exposure to worm attacks, consumers’ unreadiness for the idea, and whether the whole concept may need a rethink. A Congressional hearing on Thursday surfaced another reason for caution: the smart grid’s vulnerability to EMP. "Electromagnetic Pulse" refers to the damage caused in electrical circuits and systems when a nuclear explosive goes off nearby. The electric grid as it’s currently constituted is vulnerable to EMP; the further down the road we go towards a smart grid, the more vulnerable it will become. "It makes a great equalizer for small nations looking to stand up to military Goliaths, argues Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (Rep.-Md.), a former research scientist and engineer who has worked in the past on projects for NASA and the military. All one needs to wreak some serious EMP damage, he charges, is a sea-worthy steamer, 0,000 to buy a scud-missile launcher, and a crude nuclear weapon. Then fling the device high into the air and detonate its warhead. Such a system might not paralyze the entire United States, he concedes. ‘But you could shut down all of New England. And if you missed by 100 miles, it’s as good as a bulls eye.’"
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Hubble Photographs Jupiter’s New "Scar"
August 14th, 2009BearRanger writes "Calibration of new systems in the Hubble Space Telescope (installed in May by Shuttle Atlantis astronauts) were interrupted to take pictures of the new ’scar’ near the south pole of Jupiter. The scar is believed to have been caused by the impact of an asteroid or small comet with the gas giant, which we discussed last Sunday. Hubble’s return to service will be delayed by this interruption, but NASA says that rare events such as this warrant the delay. This is only the second recorded impact of an object with Jupiter."
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$2 Million NASA Power Beaming Challenge Heating Up
August 14th, 2009carstene writes "Qualification rounds for the NASA Centennial Challenge Power beaming contest are underway at the Dryden Flight Research Center. The contest uses a scale model of a space elevator as a race track. Entrants must build a robot to climb a cable, suspended by helicopter, 1 km into the sky without any on board energy storage. The teams are using high power laser beams to transmit power from ground stations to photovoltaic arrays on the robots. If a team can accomplish this at 5 meters per second average speed then they could win up to 2 million dollars. One day this technology could be used to power rovers in shadowed areas of the moon or to recharge electric UAV’s in-flight or even a space elevator in the far future. A blog of the event can be found here. Full disclosure: I’m a member of the LaserMotive team that you can follow on twitter, or or via blog."
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Satellites Unlock Secret to Northern India’s Vanishing Water
August 14th, 2009Using NASA satellite data, scientists have found that groundwater levels in northern India have been declining by as much as one foot per year over the past decade.
NASA Breaking News
Virginia Astronaut to Fly on Next Space Shuttle Mission
August 14th, 2009NASA astronaut Patrick Forrester, whose hometown is Springfield, Va., will make his third journey into orbit on space shuttle Discovery’s next mission to the International Space Station.
NASA Breaking News
Florida Native to Live Aboard International Space Station
August 14th, 2009Nicole Stott, a native of Clearwater, Fla., will make her first journey into orbit on space shuttle Discovery’s upcoming mission to the International Space Station. She will live and work aboard the station for three months.
NASA Breaking News
Texas Native to Fly on Next Shuttle Mission
August 14th, 2009NASA astronaut Danny Olivas, born and raised in El Paso, Texas, will conduct three spacewalks during the upcoming space shuttle mission to the International Space Station. This is the first shuttle flight to feature two Latino astronauts, Olivas and Jose Hernandez who are both of Mexican descent.
NASA Breaking News
NASA Assigns Crew for STS-134 Shuttle Mission, Change to STS-132
August 14th, 2009NASA has assigned the crew for space shuttle mission STS-134 to the International Space Station.
NASA Breaking News
Meteorite Found On Mars Yields Clues About Planet’s Past
August 14th, 2009NASA’s Mars Rover Opportunity is investigating a metallic meteorite the size of a large watermelon that is providing researchers more details about the Red Planet’s environmental history.
NASA Breaking News
Two California Astronauts to Fly on Next Space Shuttle Mission
August 14th, 2009NASA’s next space shuttle mission will carry two California- born astronauts into orbit.
NASA Breaking News
Texas Astronaut to Fly on Next Space Shuttle Mission
August 14th, 2009NASA astronaut Patrick Forrester, who was born in El Paso, Texas, will make his third journey into orbit on space shuttle Discovery’s next mission to the International Space Station.
NASA Breaking News
Indiana Astronaut to Fly on Next Space Shuttle Mission
August 14th, 2009NASA astronaut Kevin Ford, who was born in Portland, Ind., and considers Montpelier, Ind., his hometown, will serve as the pilot on space shuttle Discovery’s next mission to the International Space Station.
NASA Breaking News
TEXAS Students To Talk Live With Astronaut In Space
August 14th, 2009Students will have a unique opportunity to speak with International Space Station resident and NASA astronaut Timothy Kopra during an in-flight hookup from 10:20 to 10:40 a.m. EDT on Wednesday.
NASA Breaking News
Nevada Company Pitches ‘Lite’ Concept for NASA’s New Spaceship
August 14th, 2009A stripped down version of NASA’s future spaceship could be
ready as soon as 2013, according to Bigelow Aerospace, which proposed to build
it.
From Space.com