Meteor showers to bookend overnight skywatching opportunities in May
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 07:49
Racks in the sand from about a hundred sols ago Sol 3463
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 07:49
NASA Goddard scientists begin studying 50-year-old frozen Apollo 17 samples
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 07:49
SwRI-led team finds younger exoplanets better candidates when looking for other Earths
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 07:49
NASA visualization rounds up the best-known black hole systems
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 07:49
Meet the IT team | Space jobs
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 07:00
Meet the IT Team, see behind the scenes and find out how it is to work for the IT Department at the European Space Agency.
NaraSpace Technology closes $7.88 million Series A for nanosatellite project
Wednesday, 04 May 2022 03:15
South Korean startup NaraSpace Technology will use the $7.88 million to pursue the development of optical remote-sensing nanosatellites.
The post NaraSpace Technology closes $7.88 million Series A for nanosatellite project appeared first on SpaceNews.
NASA sets mid-May launch for Boeing Starliner spacecraft's initial trip to ISS
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 23:45
Space Force leaders questioned on their plans to invest in technology and workforce
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 23:16
Members of the Senate Armed Services Committee pressed Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall and Chief of Space Operations Gen. John “Jay” Raymond on the Space Force’s plans to acquire next-generation technologies and develop the future workforce.
ExoMars official says launch unlikely before 2028
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 22:24
A key official for Europe’s ExoMars mission believes that the rover’s launch will be pushed back until at least 2028 to accommodate changes after ending cooperation with Russia.
The post ExoMars official says launch unlikely before 2028 appeared first on SpaceNews.
AST SpaceMobile licensed to connect test satellite to US cellular phones
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 20:28
AST SpaceMobile secured an experimental license May 2 to test services in the United States from BlueWalker 3, the prototype satellite slated to launch this summer for its planned cellphone-compatible broadband constellation.
NASA's SDO sees sun release strong solar flare
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 19:12
The Sun emitted a strong solar flare on May 3, 2022, peaking at 9:25 a.m. EDT. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which watches the Sun constantly, captured an image of the event.
Solar flares are powerful bursts of energy. Flares and solar eruptions can impact radio communications, electric power grids, navigation signals, and pose risks to spacecraft and astronauts.
This flare is classified as an X-class flare. X-class denotes the most intense flares, while the number provides more information about its strength. More info on how flares are classified can be found here.
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NASA, Boeing say Starliner on track for May 19 launch
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 19:10
Boeing's Starliner capsule is finally ready to reattempt a key test launch to the International Space Station on May 19, officials said Tuesday.
The uncrewed flight, named OFT-2, is a vital step towards certifying the spaceship for eventually carrying passengers, giving NASA a second taxi provider alongside SpaceX.
Aerospace giant Boeing, which was awarded a $4.2 billion contract for the purpose in 2014, initially attempted the test in 2019, but failed to rendezvous with the ISS after experiencing software glitches that caused flight anomalies.
The program has since experienced several delays. It was last supposed to fly in August 2021, but the mission was aborted just hours before launch because high humidity led to corrosion within Starliner's valves.
Blood clot expert working with NASA to study blood flow, clot formation in zero gravity
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 17:04
Are astronauts more likely to develop blood clots during space missions due to zero gravity? That's the question NASA is trying to answer with help from UNC School of Medicine's Stephan Moll, MD, professor in the UNC Department of Medicine. A new publication in Vascular Medicine shows the results of an occupational surveillance program spurred by the development of a deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in the jugular vein of an astronaut, which is described in detail in a New England Journal of Medicine publication from 2020.
Moll was consulted by NASA when the discovery of the blood clot was made during the astronaut's mission on the International Space Station (ISS). This was the first time a blood clot had been found in an astronaut in space, so there was no established method of treatment for DVT in zero gravity. Moll, a member of the UNC Blood Research Center and a clinical hematologist, was called upon for his knowledge and treatment experience of DVT on Earth.
Which parts of Mars are the safest from cosmic radiation?
Tuesday, 03 May 2022 16:28
In the coming decade, NASA and China plan to send the first crewed missions to Mars. This will consist of both agencies sending spacecraft in 2033, 2035, 2037, and every 26 months after that to coincide with Mars opposition (i.e., when Earth and Mars are closest in their orbits). The long-term aim of these programs is to establish a base on Mars that will serve as a hub that accommodates future missions, though the Chinese have stated that they intend for their base to be a permanent one.
The prospect of sending astronauts on the six- to nine-month journey to Mars presents several challenges, to say nothing of the hazards they'll face while conducting scientific operations on the surface. In a recent study, an international team of scientists conducted a survey of the Martian environment—from the peaks of Mount Olympus to its underground recesses—to find where radiation is the lowest.