Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News
June 12, 2019
MOON DAILY
Mass anomaly detected under the moon's largest crater



Waco TX (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
A mysterious large mass of material has been discovered beneath the largest crater in our solar system - the Moon's South Pole-Aitken basin - and may contain metal from the asteroid that crashed into the Moon and formed the crater, according to a Baylor University study. "Imagine taking a pile of metal five times larger than the Big Island of Hawaii and burying it underground. That's roughly how much unexpected mass we detected," said lead author Peter B. James, Ph.D., assistant professor of plane ... read more

EXO WORLDS
Starshade Would Take Formation Flying to Extremes
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 12, 2019
Anyone who's ever seen aircraft engaged in formation flying can appreciate the feat of staying highly synchronized while airborne. In work sponsored by NASA's Exoplanet Exploration Program (ExEP), e ... more
EXO WORLDS
Study Dramatically Narrows Search for Advanced Life in the Universe
Riverside CA (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
Scientists may need to rethink their estimates for how many planets outside our solar system could host a rich diversity of life. In a new study, a UC Riverside-led team discovered that a buil ... more
TECH SPACE
NASA Prepares to Launch Twin Satellites to Study Signal Disruption From Space
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jun 11, 2019
NASA's twin E-TBEx CubeSats - short for Enhanced Tandem Beacon Experiment - are scheduled to launch in June 2019 aboard the Department of Defense's Space Test Program-2 launch. The launch includes a ... more
ROBO SPACE
Investing in Tech Concepts Aimed at Exploring Lunar Craters, Mining Asteroids
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
Robotically surveying lunar craters in record time and mining resources in space could help NASA establish a sustained human presence at the Moon - part of the agency's broader Moon to Mars explorat ... more
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MARSDAILY
Mars Helicopter Testing Enters Final Phase
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 10, 2019
NASA's Mars Helicopter flight demonstration project has passed a number of key tests with flying colors. In 2021, the small, autonomous helicopter will be the first vehicle in history to attempt to ... more
MARSDAILY
Robotic arm will raise the support structure and help the Mole hammer
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jun 11, 2019
There is a new plan to support the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) Mars 'Mole' that is part of NASA's InSight mission. The Heat Flow and Physical Properties ... more
EXO WORLDS
Alien worlds are less hospitable to complex life than scientists thought
Washington (UPI) Jun 10, 2019
New research suggests the conditions necessary for complex life forms may be even rarer than planetary scientists previously thought. Researchers determined the buildup of toxic gases in the atmosphere makes most exoplanets uninhabitable. ... more
IRON AND ICE
Hera asteroid mission's brain to be radiation-hard and failure-proof
Paris (ESA) Jun 12, 2019
At the heart of ESA's Hera mission to the double Didymos asteroids will be an onboard computer intended to be failure-proof. Designed to operate up to 490 million km away from Earth and withst ... more
IRON AND ICE
Ahuna Mons on Ceres: A New and Unusual Type of Volcanic Activity
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
When scientists first saw this structure on the images taken by their camera on the Dawn space probe, they could hardly believe their eyes: from the crater-strewn surface of the dwarf planet Ceres r ... more
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IRON AND ICE
Psyche Mission Has a Metal World in Its Sights
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 12, 2019
Designed to explore a metal asteroid that could be the heart of a planet, the Psyche mission is readying for a 2022 launch. After extensive review, NASA Headquarters in Washington has approved the m ... more
EXO WORLDS
Spectral Clues to Puzzling Paradox of Distant Planet
Houston TX (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
CI Tau b is a paradoxical planet, but new research about its mass, brightness and the carbon monoxide in its atmosphere is starting to answer questions about how a planet so large could have formed ... more
EXO WORLDS
Every Country Gets to Name an Exoplanet and Its Host Star
Munich, Germany (SPX) Jun 10, 2019
Within the framework of its 100th anniversary commemorations, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) is organising the IAU100 NameExoWorlds global campaign that allows any country in the world t ... more
MOON DAILY
The Second Moon Race
Gerroa, Australia (SPX) Mar 13, 2017
The US and China are in an undeclared race back to the Moon. At first glance it's easy to dismiss China's efforts as being little more than what the US and Russia achieved decades ago. And whi ... more
MARSDAILY
Watch NASA Build Its Next Mars Rover
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 10, 2019
A newly installed webcam offers the public a live, bird's-eye view of NASA's Mars 2020 rover as it takes shape at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. You can watch as JPL engin ... more


Accurate probing of magnetism with light

MOON DAILY
Trump says NASA should stop talking about going back to the Moon
Washington (AFP) June 7, 2019
US President Donald Trump tweeted on Friday that NASA should stop talking about going back to the Moon, which caused confusion since his administration aims to restart Moon landings by 2024. ... more
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TECH SPACE
Keep the orbital neighborhood clean
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Jun 06, 2019
More than 22,000 objects floating in space are currently being tracked by the U.S. Air Force. That number is expected to double within five years, due in large part to increased global demand for sa ... more
MARSDAILY
InSight's Team Tries New Strategy to Help the "Mole"
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 06, 2019
Scientists and engineers have a new plan for getting NASA InSight's heat probe, also known as the "mole," digging again on Mars. Part of an instrument called the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Pa ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Five Things to Know about NASA's Deep Space Atomic Clock
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 06, 2019
NASA is sending a new technology to space on June 22 that will change the way we navigate our spacecraft - even how we send astronauts to Mars and beyond. Built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Labora ... more
EXO WORLDS
Exomoons may be home to extra-terrestrial life
Lincoln UK (SPX) Jun 06, 2019
Moons orbiting planets outside our solar system could offer another clue about the pool of worlds that may be home to extra-terrestrial life, according to an astrophysicist at the University of Linc ... more
ROBO SPACE
Army project develops agile scouting robots
Research Triangle Park NC (SPX) Jun 03, 2019
In a research project for the U.S. Army, researchers at the University of California, Berkeley developed an agile robot, called Salto that looks like a Star Wars Imperial walker in miniature and may ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
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Robotic arm will raise the support structure and help the Mole hammer
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jun 11, 2019
There is a new plan to support the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) Mars 'Mole' that is part of NASA's InSight mission. The Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (HP3) Mole is a self-driving penetrator that has hammered itself into the Martian subsurface to a depth of approximately 30 centimetres. Since 28 February 2019, it has no longer been able to m ... more
+ Mars Helicopter Testing Enters Final Phase
+ Watch NASA Build Its Next Mars Rover
+ InSight's Team Tries New Strategy to Help the "Mole"
+ Mars on Earth - what next?
+ Massive Mars crater could have hosted life
+ 'Fettuccine' may be most obvious sign of life on Mars
+ NASA's Mars 2020 gets HD eyes


Mass anomaly detected under the moon's largest crater
Waco TX (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
A mysterious large mass of material has been discovered beneath the largest crater in our solar system - the Moon's South Pole-Aitken basin - and may contain metal from the asteroid that crashed into the Moon and formed the crater, according to a Baylor University study. "Imagine taking a pile of metal five times larger than the Big Island of Hawaii and burying it underground. That's rough ... more
+ Trump says NASA should stop talking about going back to the Moon
+ The Second Moon Race
+ Ascent Abort-2 Preparations 'A Really Good Test Run' For Artemis 1
+ What Causes Flashes on the Moon
+ Arizona's Role in Mapping the Moon
+ Five ethical questions for how we choose to use the Moon
+ US and Japan partner on future moon mission
On Pluto the Winter is approaching, and the atmosphere is vanishing into frost
Lisbon, Portugal (SPX) May 21, 2019
With less than a fifth of the Moon's mass, Pluto can still retain an atmosphere, though a tenuous envelope of gas produced by the periodical sublimation of nitrogen ices. A study that followed the evolution of Pluto's atmosphere for fourteen years shows its seasonal nature, and predicts that it will now start to condensate as frost. This study1 was published in the journal Astronomy and As ... more
+ Neptune's moon Triton fosters rare icy union
+ Juno Finds Changes in Jupiter's Magnetic Field
+ Gas insulation could be protecting an ocean inside Pluto
+ NASA's New Horizons Team Publishes First Kuiper Belt Flyby Science Results
+ Brazilian scientists investigate dwarf planet's ring
+ Next-Generation NASA Instrument Advanced to Study the Atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune
+ Public Invited to Help Name Solar System's Largest Unnamed World
Every Country Gets to Name an Exoplanet and Its Host Star
Munich, Germany (SPX) Jun 10, 2019
Within the framework of its 100th anniversary commemorations, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) is organising the IAU100 NameExoWorlds global campaign that allows any country in the world to give a popular name to a selected exoplanet and its host star. Nearly 100 countries have already signed up to organise national campaigns that will provide the public with an opportunity to vo ... more
+ Study Dramatically Narrows Search for Advanced Life in the Universe
+ Spectral Clues to Puzzling Paradox of Distant Planet
+ Starshade Would Take Formation Flying to Extremes
+ Alien worlds are less hospitable to complex life than scientists thought
+ Exomoons may be home to extra-terrestrial life
+ Physicists Discover New Clue to Planet Formation
+ Bacteria's protein quality control agent offers insight into origins of life
NASA looks to Australia for its first-ever private commercial launch site
Washington DC (UPI) Jun 10, 2019
NASA is planning to sign its first-ever contract with a private commercial launch site - in Australia's remote Northern Territory. The space agency said it needs to conduct launches of suborbital sounding rockets in that region for astrophysics science experiments. "One of the advantages of using sounding rockets for scientific research is the mobility to go where the science is happ ... more
+ NASA Spacecraft to use 'Green' Fuel for the First Time
+ Students Boosting Technical Skills at NASA Wallops' Rocket Week
+ Ariane 6 development on track
+ SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch of 24 satellites now targeting June 24
+ Space Rider: Europe's reusable space transport system
+ Aerojet Rocketdyne Opens State-of-the-Art Rocket Propulsion Facility in Huntsville
+ Leading the New Space Age: Government backs ambitious plans for the UK in space


Luokung and Land Space to develop control system for space and ground assets
Beijing, China (SPX) Jun 03, 2019
Luokung Technology Corp. has announced a strategic partnership with Land Space Technology Corporation Ltd. ("Land Space"). The two parties will work together and take advantage of respective strength on commercial space cooperation with satellite remote sensing data applications as the main target market. They will jointly develop domestic and foreign markets of products and services which ... more
+ Yaogan-33 launch fails in north China, Possible debris recovered in Laos
+ China develops new-generation rockets for upcoming missions
+ China's satellite navigation industry sees rapid development
+ China's Yuanwang-7 departs for space monitoring missions
+ China's tracking ship Yuanwang-2 starts new mission after retirement
+ China to build moon station in 'about 10 years'
+ China to enhance international space cooperation
Scientists find largest meteorite impact in the British Isles
Washington (UPI) Jun 10, 2019
Researchers have located the epicenter of an ancient meteorite impact along the Scottish coast, the largest impact in the British Isles. Scientists first identified evidence of the impact in 2008, but they were unable to pin down the exact location of the crater. Over the last decade, researchers conducted field studies and analyzed rock samples in the lab. Their findings allowed them t ... more
+ Hera asteroid mission's brain to be radiation-hard and failure-proof
+ Ahuna Mons on Ceres: A New and Unusual Type of Volcanic Activity
+ Uncovering the Hidden History of a Giant Asteroid
+ Psyche Mission Has a Metal World in Its Sights
+ VLT Observes Passing Double Asteroid Hurtling by Earth
+ GomSpace to design world's first stand-alone nanosatellite asteroid rendezvous mission
+ Oldest meteorite collection on Earth found in one of the driest places


Directed Energy Outlook: Preparing for Full Deployment
New York NY (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
Harry Sinsheimer serves as the Deputy Director to the Joint Directed Energy Transition Office (DE JTO) since February 2017. Harry's experience, knowledge, skills and understanding of laser technology, directed energy weapons, test and evaluation, financial management, logistics, program analysis, organizational and force structure is helping advocate, develop and execute a DE JTO investment stra ... more
+ US Navy Ships to Deploy Lasers as Anti-Missile Defense in 2021
+ Raytheon shoots down drone with lasers, microwaves in Air Force test
+ Leidos awarded $19.3M for work on laser weapon system
+ Anti-Satellite Laser Base Discovered in China's Xinjiang Province
+ U.S. Air Force tests microwave, laser weapon systems
Pentagon calls Turkey plan to buy Russian missiles 'devastating'
Washington (AFP) May 30, 2019
A top Pentagon official said on Thursday the consequences would be "devastating" for Turkey's joint F-35 fighter program and its cooperation with NATO if the country bought a Russian missile defense system. Kathryn Wheelbarger, Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs, said that Ankara's planned purchase of the S-400 system would damage Turkey's ability to wo ... more
+ Syrian air defence fires at 'enemy missiles' in Damascus: state media
+ Erdogan offers Trump working group on Russian missiles
+ Washington says 'possible' Ankara will reject Russian missiles
+ Patriot system, transport ship sent to Middle East as Iran tensions rise
+ Lockheed Martin awarded $84.9 million Navy contract for AEGIS system development
+ State Department approves $2.7B Patriot system sale to UAE
+ Turkey to buy Russian missiles despite US 'threats'


Researchers find ice feature on Saturn's giant moon
Tucson AZ (SPX) May 01, 2019
Rain, seas and a surface of eroding organic material can be found both on Earth and on Saturn's largest moon, Titan. However, on Titan it is methane, not water, that fills the lakes with slushy raindrops. While trying to find the source of Titan's methane, University of Arizona researcher Caitlin Griffith and her team discovered something unexoldpected - a long ice feature that wraps nearl ... more
+ Giant planets and big data: What deep learning reveals about Saturn's storms
+ Deep learning takes Saturn by storm
+ NASA's Cassini Reveals Surprises with Titan's Lakes
+ New close-ups of the mini-moons in Saturn's rings
+ Scientist sheds light on Titan's mysterious nitrogen atmosphere
+ Cassini data show Saturn's Rings relatively new
+ Scientists Finally Know What Time It Is on Saturn
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles
Bochum, Germany (SPX) May 07, 2019
Nanoparticles can be used in many ways as catalysts. To be able to tailor them in such a way that they can catalyse certain reactions selectively and efficiently, researchers need to determine the properties of single particles as precisely as possible. So far, an ensemble of many nanoparticles is analysed. However, the problem of these investigations is that the contributions of different parti ... more
+ Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials
+ 2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes
+ Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems
+ AD alloyed nanoantennas for temperature-feedback identification of viruses and explosives
+ Quantum optical cooling of nanoparticles
+ Researchers report new light-activated micro pump
+ Defects help nanomaterial soak up more pollutant in less time


Development of a displacement sensor to measure gravity of smallest source mass ever
Sendai, Japan (SPX) May 23, 2019
One of the most unknown phenomena in modern physics is gravity. Its measurement and laws remain somewhat of an enigma. Researchers at Tohoku University have revealed important information about a new aspect of the nature of gravity by probing the smallest mass-scale. Professor Nobuyuki Matsumoto has led a team of researchers to develop a gravity sensor based on monitoring the displacement ... more
+ Gravitational waves leave a detectable mark, physicists say
+ UCLA students touch space with a microgravity experiment
+ LIGO and Virgo Detect Neutron Star Smash-Ups
+ Scientists Find More Evidence the Universe Is a Violent Place
+ What Earth's gravity reveals about climate change
+ Ten years before the detection of gravitational waves
+ Upgraded Detectors to Resume Hunt for Gravitational Waves
Planck Finds No New Evidence for Cosmic Anomalies
Paris (ESA) Jun 10, 2019
ESA's Planck satellite has found no new evidence for the puzzling cosmic anomalies that appeared in its temperature map of the universe. The latest study does not rule out the potential relevance of the anomalies but they do mean astronomers must work even harder to understand the origin of these puzzling features. Planck's latest results come from an analysis of the polarisation of the Co ... more
+ 'Best ever' simulation solves 40-year black hole mystery
+ Detection of powerful winds driven by a supermassive black hole
+ Cool, Nebulous Ring Around Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole
+ Five Things to Know about NASA's Deep Space Atomic Clock
+ A unique experiment to explore black holes
+ Most-detailed-ever simulations of black hole solve longstanding mystery
+ Physicists create stable, strongly magnetized plasma jet in laboratory


Investing in Tech Concepts Aimed at Exploring Lunar Craters, Mining Asteroids
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 12, 2019
Robotically surveying lunar craters in record time and mining resources in space could help NASA establish a sustained human presence at the Moon - part of the agency's broader Moon to Mars exploration approach. Two mission concepts to explore these capabilities have been selected as the first-ever Phase III studies within the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program. "We are pursu ... more
+ Army project develops agile scouting robots
+ Better together: human and robot co-workers
+ British art dealer unveils pioneering robot artist
+ Robots activated by water may be the next frontier
+ Rise of the Machines: AI beats humans in multiplayer shooter
+ Artificial intelligence becomes life-long learner with new framework
+ Toy transformers and real-life whales inspire biohybrid robot
Study of hawks' pursuit of prey could help scientists capture rogue drones
Washington (UPI) Jun 11, 2019
The tracking strategy utilized by hawks could be used to capture rogue drones, according to a new study. Falcons track their prey a lot like a heat-seeking missiles honing in on a target - they follow a streamlined trajectory, capturing airborne prey. But hawks must navigate more crowded environs and follow small targets that zig and zag across the ground. Researchers at the Uni ... more
+ Amazon says drone deliveries coming 'within months'
+ Insitu nabs $47.9M to deliver ScanEagle drones to four U.S. allies in Asia
+ Northrop Grumman nabs $65M for drones for Navy, Australia
+ General Atomics awarded $36.4M for drone, intelligence work in Afghanistan
+ 'Neural Lander' uses AI to land drones smoothly
+ Vestas launches massive drone-based blade inspection campaign
+ Citadel Defense awarded contract to prevent UAV attacks at sensitive government locations
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