Blog

Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 840

Aug 10, 2018

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Is Named for Him. 60 Years Ago, No One Believed His Ideas About the Sun

Posted by in category: space

Eugene N. Parker predicted the existence of solar wind in 1958. The NASA spacecraft, scheduled to launch on Saturday, is the first named for a living person.

Read more

Aug 10, 2018

NASA’s first sun probe set to launch

Posted by in category: space

NASA’s first mission to the sun is set to launch on Saturday. The probe will have to withstand heat and radiation never previously experienced by any spacecraft https://cnn.it/2KNGkuQ

Read more

Aug 9, 2018

New Horizons may have spotted a hydrogen wall at the edge of the solar system

Posted by in category: space

New Horizons may have seen a hydrogen wall just past the edge of the solar system, where the solar wind meets the stuff of interstellar space.

Read more

Aug 9, 2018

Why I Want To Put a Kindle in Space

Posted by in category: space

If an earthbound technology might be revolutionary in space, what does it take to find out?

Read more

Aug 8, 2018

‘Rogue Planet’ Travels Universe Without A Parent Star

Posted by in category: space

This ‘rogue planet’ travels the universe without a star.

Read more

Aug 7, 2018

WWII destroyed optical observatory, Ermita, Manila, Philippines, July 8, 1945

Posted by in category: space

The astronomical observatory was founded by the Jesuits during the Spanish occupation and later transferred to the Philippine Commonwealth Weather Department. This was adjacent to the University of the Philippines campus of today south of Luneta Park. The observatory had a 19-inch refracting telescope, by far the largest in the Orient. The staff of the observatory includes five Jesuit fathers and twenty-five well-trained native assistants. The construction of a 19-inch refracting telescope and dome was in 1897.

US signal corps photo, US national archives.

Read more

Aug 7, 2018

Diving Into That Lake on Mars

Posted by in category: space

Who’s up for a swim?


Our world was rocked by last week’s announcement of good radar evidence for a liquid water “lake” under the Red Planet’s south pole. Senior Editor Emily Lakdawalla introduces us to the story that is then taken up by two of host Mat Kaplan’s favorite Martians. The Goddard Space Flight Center’s James Garvin headed NASA’s Mars exploration program, while NASA Ames astrobiologist Chris McKay co-founded the Mars Underground more than 35 years ago. Look up! Mars is still close by, and the Perseid meteor shower is around the corner. Bruce Betts gives us the What’s Up lowdown.

Read more

Aug 7, 2018

The Genetics (and Ethics) of Making Humans Fit for Mars

Posted by in categories: ethics, food, genetics, space

We could make people less stinky, more resistant to radiation, even less dependent on food and oxygen. But would the new creature be human?

Read more

Aug 7, 2018

The World’s First Space Mining Program Launches in Colorado

Posted by in category: space

The Colorado School of Mines’ space resources program will teach grad students how to tap celestial bodies for all they’re worth.

Read more

Aug 6, 2018

Houston, We Have a Solution: Blockchain in the Space Industry

Posted by in categories: bitcoin, space

Blockchain is used both by NASA and startups hoping to democratize space.

Houston, We Have a Solution: Blockchain in the Space Industry

Analysis.

Continue reading “Houston, We Have a Solution: Blockchain in the Space Industry” »

Page 840 of 1,030First837838839840841842843844Last