Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 488
Dec 15, 2015
Year in review: Pluto unveiled as a world like no other — By Christopher Crockett | ScienceNews
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: space, space travel, water
“The alien landscapes of Pluto and its moons dazzled scientists and nonscientists alike this year. More than eight decades after its discovery, Pluto became much more than a nondescript point of light. It’s a dynamic, complex world unlike any other orbiting the sun.”
Tag: Pluto
Dec 11, 2015
Elon Musk Is Ready to Conquer Mars
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: Elon Musk, space travel, transportation
One of his companies is trying to upend the auto industry. Another of his companies is trying to put people on Mars. Yet another is trying to bring electricity to everyone who needs it. Elon Musk wants to reinvent the world in a single lifetime. But is the future ready for Elon Musk?
Following the current fashion for visionary technological geniuses to be portrayed through three critical moments in their lives, * here are three from Elon Musk’s. Except, in this case, they all come from one single day—October 12, 2015, a Monday—a day that feels like it could’ve been pretty much any day in Musk’s life right now.
Dec 6, 2015
Beyond the Boundary — The Greatest Challenge: Manned Interstellar Travel
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: robotics/AI, space travel
By Andreas M. Hein in Artificial Intelligence and Science Fiction. Beyond the Boundary: Exploring the Science and Culture of Interstellar Spaceflight.
Dec 4, 2015
SpaceX Will Try Its Next Rocket Landing on Solid Ground
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: space travel
Following two failed landings at sea, the next Falcon 9 rocket will attempt to touch down at Cape Canaveral.
After SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket returns to flight later this month, the company will try to land the first stage booster back on solid ground, according to NASA officials. If successful, it would mark not only the first successful landing and recovery of the company’s flagship rocket, but also the first terrestrial rocket landing for SpaceX after two failed landing attempts at sea.
The launch—which could come as soon as December 15, though a flight plan has not been confirmed by the U.S. Air Force—marks a big next step for SpaceX. The mission will be the company’s first since a June launch in which an unmanned Falcon 9 bound for the International Space Station broke apart mid-flight. The landing attempt will also follow the successful launch and landing of a reusable rocket by rival spaceflight company Blue Origin last week.
Dec 1, 2015
SpaceX Will Attempt Next Rocket Landing At Cape Canaveral Instead Of In The Ocean
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: space travel
Next time a SpaceX rocket touches down, it will be on solid ground.
Florida Today broke the news today that SpaceX was hoping to land its next Falcon 9 rocket on the ground at NASA’s Cape Canaveral facility in Florida.
SpaceX has attempted to land a rocket gently before, but those attempts were made on giant floating platforms in the ocean (which just missed). Then, last week, competitor Blue Origin managed to land it’s own reusable rocket safely on the ground, amping up the public pressure on SpaceX to successfully land their own rocket.
Nov 25, 2015
Russia and Europe Want a Moon Colony—Why Is NASA So Focused on Mars?
Posted by Andreas Matt in category: space travel
Only 12 people—all Americans—have put their boots on the Moon. Today, however, NASA has no plans to send humans back to our pockmarked satellite. Instead, its space pioneers will shoot straight to Mars (and wave to the Moon as they pass it by).
Nov 24, 2015
Jeff Bezos launched and landed the world’s first reusable rocket
Posted by Jeremy Lichtman in category: space travel
Nov 24, 2015
NASA gives MIT a humanoid robot to develop software for future space missions
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: information science, robotics/AI, space travel
A team led by MIT Professor Russ Tedrake has been selected by NASA to develop algorithms for the 6-foot-tall “Valkyrie” robot in support of future space travel to Mars and beyond.
Nov 23, 2015
Will NASA Ever Send Astronauts To Pluto?
Posted by Bruce Dorminey in category: space travel
With its nitrogen-dominated atmosphere and water-rich icy surface, Pluto seems much more hospitable than even the most sanguine planetary scientists would have wagered a decade ago. But could it ever play host to an Antarctic-styled research station?
That is, as a base to routinely house researcher/astronauts out to give humans a foothold in the outer reaches of our solar system?
“The notion of a Pluto base figures prominently in the anime ‘Star Blazers’ from my childhood, so it’d be wonderful if there were a good reason for it,” said Gerard van Belle, a research astronomer at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Az., where Clyde Tombaugh discovered the diminutive dwarf planet some 85 years ago.