UAH HERC rover team makes STEM outreach trip to Dominican Republic
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
Winning the 2024 Human Rover Explorer Challenge (HERC) provided an engineering student team at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of the University of Alabama System, the opportunity to perform STEM outreach in the Dominican Republic (DR) this summer. UAH rover team THESEUS members traveled to the DR capital to give presentations to attendees at the Instituto Tecnologico de Sa Study identifies key materials for shielding astronauts from Mars radiation
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
Researchers have pinpointed a range of materials, including specific plastics, rubber, synthetic fibers, and Martian soil (regolith), as effective options for shielding astronauts from harmful space radiation on Mars. These insights are critical for developing protective habitats and spacesuits, paving the way for extended Mars missions. The thin atmosphere and lack of a magnetic field on Mars l NASA's DART impact alters Dimorphos' shape and orbit significantly
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
A recent study reveals that NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft, which collided with the asteroid moon Dimorphos in 2022, permanently altered both its shape and its orbit. The impact deformed Dimorphos, creating a large crater and reshaping it to the extent that it disrupted the moon's natural evolutionary trajectory. Researchers now believe that Dimorphos might start "tumb Meteor shower characteristics linked to early comet formation conditions
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
A global team of 45 scientists studying meteor showers has uncovered that comets break apart in different ways when nearing the Sun, with these variations tied to the environments where the comets initially formed 4.5 billion years ago. The findings, recently published in the journal 'Icarus', suggest that these differences in comet disintegration are influenced by the conditions in the protopla Airbus ships 3rd Orion Service Module to NASA for Artemis 3 lunar mission
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
The third European Service Module (ESM-3) for NASA's Orion spacecraft has departed from Airbus' Bremen, Germany, facilities, bound for Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This module will be integrated with the Crew Module in preparation for the Artemis III mission, which will see astronauts return to the lunar surface for the first time since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.
Constructed by Air Ancient binary star system found traveling from Milky Way's Outer Halo
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
A team of researchers has identified a rare binary star system, estimated to be around 10 billion years old, that has traveled from the remote regions of the Milky Way's halo to our local stellar neighborhood.
The international team, including experts from the University of Hertfordshire, the UK, Spain, and China, made the discovery while examining stars near Earth. They identified a pair Study predicts gravitational waves from collapsing massive stars
Saturday, 24 August 2024 05:12
The violent collapse of massive, rapidly spinning stars could generate detectable gravitational waves, according to new research published in 'The Astrophysical Journal Letters'. Scientists suggest that these waves, resulting from collapsing stars known as collapsars, are just waiting to be discovered by current observatories.
These gravitational waves are produced when stars, 15 to 20 tim Space Force awards $200 million contract to Northrop Grumman for UK radar site
Friday, 23 August 2024 22:13

Blue Origin sets date for next New Shepard flight after completing parachute investigation
Friday, 23 August 2024 21:48

SpaceWERX awards contracts to nine space tech firms for defense projects
Friday, 23 August 2024 20:22

Supreme Court case could affect orbital debris mitigation rules
Friday, 23 August 2024 19:29

RFA pushes maiden flight to 2025 after launchpad explosion
Friday, 23 August 2024 18:40

Could 2 NASA astronauts be stuck at the space station until next year? A decision is imminent
Friday, 23 August 2024 17:10
Will two NASA astronauts return to Earth soon in their troubled Boeing capsule? Or wait at the International Space Station for a ride home next year with SpaceX?
NASA has been wrestling with that decision ever since Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams arrived at the orbiting lab in early June on what was supposed to be a weeklong test flight.
Researchers identify effective materials for protecting astronauts from harmful cosmic radiation on Mars
Friday, 23 August 2024 15:05
Researchers have identified specific materials, including certain plastics, rubber, and synthetic fibers, as well as Martian soil (regolith), which would effectively protect astronauts by blocking harmful space radiation on Mars. These findings could inform the design of protective habitats and spacesuits, making long-duration Mars missions more feasible. Because Mars lacks Earth's thick atmosphere and magnetic field, astronauts exploring the planet would be exposed to dangerous levels of radiation.
Dimitra Atri, Investigator, Center for Astrophysics and Space Science and Group Leader of the Mars Research Group at NYU Abu Dhabi's Center for Astrophysics and Space Science, and lead author Dionysios Gakis from the University of Patras in Greece, report these new findings in "Modeling the effectiveness of radiation shielding materials for astronaut protection on Mars," appearing in the journal The European Physical Journal Plus.
Comparing two proposed NASA missions to Jupiter's moon Io
Friday, 23 August 2024 14:40
Thanks to NASA's Juno mission to the Jupiter system, we're getting our best looks ever at the gas giant's volcanic moon Io. Even as Juno provides our best views of the moon, it also deepens our existing questions. Only a dedicated mission to Io can answer those questions, and there are two proposed missions.
Io is well-known as the most geologically active world in the solar system, and it's not even close.

