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Archive for the ‘satellites’ category: Page 59

Jul 21, 2022

Mushrooms could solve a huge problem in outer space

Posted by in categories: materials, satellites

Circa 2021


Mycelium is very light in weight, it naturally floats on water, it can withstand the cold of space where we don’t have to worry about cold welding, and we can add in fine strains of metal material which is used to transmit almost any type of signal. As you can see, there are numerous reasons why mycelium is quite suitable for our satellites in space, on land, and in the air on its way to space.

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Jul 21, 2022

SpaceX’s first Starlink V2 satellites spotted at Starbase

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, internet, satellites

On Monday, SpaceX was spotted loading some of the first Starlink V2 satellite prototypes into a custom mechanism designed to refill Starship’s magazine-like payload bay.

While it’s not the first time SpaceX has used the dispenser, the photos captured by photographer Kevin Randolph are the first to clearly show real prototypes of the next generation of Starlink satellites. According to CEO Elon Musk, those Starlink Gen2 or V2 satellites will be “at least 5 times better”, “an order of magnitude more capable,” and about four times heavier than current (V1.5) Starlink satellites.

The potential of the new satellite bus design paired with Starship’s massive fairing and lift capacity could dramatically improve the viability and cost-effectiveness of SpaceX’s Starlink constellation. First, though, the company needs to launch and qualify prototypes of the new satellite design and verify that all associated ground support equipment works as expected.

Jul 19, 2022

China’s space agency could send a mission to Neptune — major discoveries await

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, satellites

Ice giants like Neptune are a potential treasure trove of scientific discoveries.


There’s also Triton’s cryovolcanic activity, resulting from tidal flexing in its interior caused by Neptune’s gravitational pull. However, this activity increases when Triton is closest to the Sun (perihelion), resulting in greater eruptions from the interior. This will leave higher concentrations of nitrogen and other gases in the moon’s tenuous atmosphere, which could be studied to learn more about its interior composition and structure. As for the rings, the team noted several objectives there:

“Establish a complete list of planetary rings and their inner Shepherd satellites, study the characteristics, formation mechanism, material exchange, and gas transport of planetary rings of different orbital types, analyze the origin of different celestial bodies, and detect possible organic matter… The multiple planetary rings of Neptune are not uniformly distributed in longitude. Instead, it presents an arc-block-like discrete structure. Why these arc-block structures can exist, and whether they exist stably without spreading out, are all interesting dynamical problems.”

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Jul 14, 2022

Mars satellite finishes imaging the planet’s entire surface

Posted by in category: satellites

The China National Space Administration’s Tianwen-1 spacecraft has finished its mission to image the entire Martian surface.

Jul 12, 2022

Internet on the go: FCC greenlights Starlink service on moving cars, boats, and planes

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

If you’re ready for connectivity on the move, SpaceX’s Starlink satellite broadband may soon be the answer. The US Federal Communications Commission on Thursday gave the internet provider the greenlight to provide service on moving vehicles, boats, and planes.

The new authority should help SpaceX meet “the growing user demands that now require connectivity while on the move,” wrote FCC International Bureau Chief Tom Sullivan in the approval, “whether driving an RV across the country, moving a freighter from Europe to a U.S. port, or while on a domestic or international flight.”

Jul 11, 2022

Russia may be building a giant laser-based anti-satellite weapon

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

Will it succeed?An open-source investigation suggests that Russia is building a giant laser-based anti-satellite weapon near Zelenchukskaya in the southwest part of the country, Space.com reported. This will allow it a soft-kill option to take down adversarial satellites.


Instead of temporarily blurring sensors, Russia is going full throttle, looking to destroy optical sensors on satellites.

Jul 10, 2022

SpaceX prices fast Starlink satellite Internet for ships, yachts, and oil rigs at US$5,000 with the highest download speeds

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

Barely did the ink under the FCC approval signature dry, and SpaceX’s Starlink satellite Internet announced a new pricey Maritime service for commercial ships, oil rigs, or premium yachts. Nothing is stopping people with recreational boats to get Starlink Maritime, too, save for the monthly tag and equipment fees.

Jul 9, 2022

Starlink: SpaceX is now offering for ships as well

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

What is most interesting about their announcement is that it says that in about 6 months they will be offering service to the entire planet when they will be flying enough laser satellites to pull this off.

Jul 6, 2022

Why more Planet Labs’ shoebox-sized satellites are headed into orbit on SpaceX rockets

Posted by in category: satellites

Planet Labs uses shoebox-sized satellites to send back real-time images of the Earth every day.

Jul 4, 2022

China takes aim at NASA chief’s moon military takeover claims

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

American official Bill Nelson says Chinese astronauts are learning how to destroy other countries’ satellites.

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