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NASA works to head off losing too much Osiris-Rex asteroid dust Washington (AFP) Oct 23, 2020 NASA said Friday that its robotic spacecraft Osiris-Rex had succeeded in collecting a large sample of particles from the Bennu asteroid this week - but so much that it was leaking. The team in charge of the probe is now working to quickly stow the remaining samples that would eventually be delivered back to Earth to provide key scientific insights. "A substantial fraction of the required collected mass is seen escaping," mission chief Dante Lauretta said in a phone briefing with journalists. ... read more |
Smile, wave: Some exoplanets may be able to see us, too Ithaca NY (SPX) Oct 22, 2020 Three decades after Cornell astronomer Carl Sagan suggested that Voyager 1 snap Earth's picture from billions of miles away - resulting in the iconic Pale Blue Dot photograph - two astronomers now o ... more Madrid, Spain (SPX) Oct 23, 2020 The SPAINSAT NG programme, owned and operated by Hisdesat, has successfully passed the preliminary design review (PDR) of the payload and the full satellite, including PDR of Pacis 3 (PPP) elements. ... more Washington DC (UPI) Oct 22, 2020 NASA researchers have created a prototype of a technology that can diagnose a variety of illnesses and abnormalities just by analyzing compounds in a person's breath. ... more Wuhan, China (XNA) Oct 23, 2020 China's manned space program has entered the mission preparation stage with the selection of a new group of 18 reserve astronauts. According to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA), the reserve astr ... more |
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Previous Issues | Oct 23 | Oct 22 | Oct 21 | Oct 20 | Oct 19 |
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Eagles to land first student project on Moon to snap selfie of Lunar landing Daytona Beach, FL (SPX) Oct 22, 2020 Embry-Riddle is partnering with NASA commercial payload provider Intuitive Machines to send a camera to space that will capture the first-ever selfie of a spacecraft touching down on the moon. ... more Kingston RI (SPX) Oct 21, 2020 For the first time, researchers have mapped the biological diversity of marine sediment, one of Earth's largest global biomes. Although marine sediment covers 70% of the Earth's surface, little was ... more Bethesda, MD (SPX) Oct 20, 2020 We are all aware of the growing amount of junk floating around Earth in low orbits. Ultimately, the mass and distribution of junk and active satellites will exceed the capacity of space to safely co ... more Houston TX (SPX) Oct 21, 2020 When the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft touches asteroid Bennu, it will capture NASA's first sample from an asteroid and provide rare specimens for research that scientists hop ... more Boston MA (SPX) Oct 22, 2020 Recent research suggests that most languages that have ever existed are no longer spoken. Dozens of these dead languages are also considered to be lost, or "undeciphered" - that is, we don't know en ... more |
A global collaboration to move artificial intelligence principles to practice Kennedy Space Center FL (SPX) Oct 20, 2020 The Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced three flight projects that were selected as part of a joint solicitation focused on lev ... more |
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Atomic clocks experience the quantum phenomenon called superposition Washington DC (UPI) Oct 23, 2020 Not even the most precise atomic clocks are immune to the quantum phenomenon known as superposition, according to a new theory developed by a team of physicists from Dartmouth College, Saint Anselm College and Santa Clara University. ... more Munich, Germany (SPX) Oct 23, 2020 Edge Localised Modes, ELMs for short, are one of the disturbances of the plasma confinement that are caused by the interaction between the charged plasma particles and the confining magnetic field c ... more Boston MA (SPX) Oct 22, 2020 As Covid-19 has made it necessary for people to keep their distance from each other, robots are stepping in to fill essential roles, such as sanitizing warehouses and hospitals, ferrying test sample ... more Washington DC (SPX) Oct 19, 2020 Kicking off the one-year countdown to the launch of NASA's Lucy mission, middle and high school students in U.S. public, private and home schools can enter the Lucy in Space contest starting today. ... more Washington DC (UPI) Oct 21, 2020 Images released Wednesday by NASA suggest the OSIRIS-REx mission's Touch-And-Go sample collection event was a success. ... more |
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Sensors on Mars 2020 Spacecraft Answer Long-Distance Call From Earth Pasadena CA (JPL) Oct 23, 2020 On Oct. 8, 2020, with COVID-19 safety protocols in place, team members of the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover mission waited for a reply from the Mars Entry, Descent, and Landing Instrumentation 2 (MEDLI2) suite onboard the spacecraft, which is currently en route to the Red Planet. MEDLI2 is a collection of sensors that will measure aerothermal environments and thermal protection system mater ... more |
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Eagles to land first student project on Moon to snap selfie of Lunar landing Daytona Beach, FL (SPX) Oct 22, 2020 Embry-Riddle is partnering with NASA commercial payload provider Intuitive Machines to send a camera to space that will capture the first-ever selfie of a spacecraft touching down on the moon. Ahead of the United States' crewed return to the moon in 2024, the Nova-C Lunar Lander will launch a science and technology payload to a valley in the Ocean of Storms. Just before it reaches the luna ... more |
The mountains of Pluto are snowcapped, but not for the same reasons as on Earth Paris, France (SPX) Oct 14, 2020 In 2015, the New Horizons space probe discovered spectacular snowcapped mountains on Pluto, which are strikingly similar to mountains on Earth. Such a landscape had never before been observed elsewhere in the Solar System. However, as atmospheric temperatures on our planet decrease at altitude, on Pluto they heat up at altitude as a result of solar radiation. So where does this ice come fr ... more |
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Microbial diversity below seafloor is as rich as on Earth's surface Kingston RI (SPX) Oct 21, 2020 For the first time, researchers have mapped the biological diversity of marine sediment, one of Earth's largest global biomes. Although marine sediment covers 70% of the Earth's surface, little was known about its global patterns of microbial diversity. A team of researchers from the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), the University of Hyogo, the University of ... more |
Shetland spaceport boosts UK's plans for launch London, UK (SPX) Oct 23, 2020 Hundreds of space jobs will be created in Scotland following the approval of plans for Lockheed Martin to transfer its satellite launch operations to Shetland Space Centre by the UK government. Shetland Space Centre anticipates that by 2024, the spaceport site could support a total of 605 jobs in Scotland including 140 locally and 210 across the wider Shetland region. A further 150 jobs will als ... more |
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China Focus: 18 reserve astronauts selected for China's manned space program Wuhan, China (XNA) Oct 23, 2020 China's manned space program has entered the mission preparation stage with the selection of a new group of 18 reserve astronauts. According to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA), the reserve astronauts, including one female, have been selected recently from 2,500 candidates. Among them are seven spacecraft pilots, seven space flight engineers and four payload experts. Flight engineers a ... more |
Planning for the worst during Asteroid sample return mission Greenbelt MD (SPX) Oct 20, 2020 On October 20, Estelle Church sent commands instructing NASA's mission to touch asteroid Bennu, becoming NASA's first mission to collect a sample of material from an asteroid's surface. Church has been planning this moment for the past five years, thinking about all the things that could end the Touch-And-Go (TAG) mission. Church's job is to keep the spacecraft safe. She has to think and p ... more |
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Do Directed Energy Weapons finally live up to their expectations? Amsterdam, Netherlands (SPX) Sep 23, 2020 Since the mid-1960s few weapons have held as much potential and have constantly failed to live up to that potential as Directed Energy Weapons (DEW). However, since the turn of this century even as most countries have curtailed both their hopes and funding from the highs of decades past, DEWs have gradually and quietly matured. DEWs use the electromagnetic spectrum (light and radio energy) ... more |
Lockheed Martin poised to deliver on national priority for Homeland Defense Bethesda VA (SPX) Oct 19, 2020 Lockheed Martin teamed with Aerojet Rocketdyne on a proposal to compete for the Next Generation Interceptor (NGI) contract for The Missile Defense Agency (MDA). Lockheed Martin is offering an interceptor designed from the ground up as an all-up-round to address all elements of environmental survivability from day one. Our partner Aerojet Rocketdyne will power our primary propulsion to addr ... more |
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ALMA shows volcanic impact on Io's atmosphere Charlottesville VA (SPX) Oct 22, 2020 New radio images from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) show for the first time the direct effect of volcanic activity on the atmosphere of Jupiter's moon Io. Io is the most volcanically active moon in our solar system. It hosts more than 400 active volcanoes, spewing out sulfur gases that give Io its yellow-white-orange-red colors when they freeze out on its surface. ... more |
Nano particles for healthy tissue Paris (ESA) Sep 07, 2020 "Eat your vitamins" might be replaced with "ingest your ceramic nano-particles" in the future as space research is giving more weight to the idea that nanoscopic particles could help protect cells from common causes of damage. Oxidative stress occurs in our bodies when cells lose the natural balance of electrons in the molecules that we are made of. This is a common and constant occurrence ... more |
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UMD astronomers find x-rays lingering years after landmark neutron star collision College Park MD (SPX) Oct 13, 2020 It's been three years since the landmark detection of a neutron star merger from gravitational waves. And since that day, an international team of researchers led by University of Maryland astronomer Eleonora Troja has been continuously monitoring the subsequent radiation emissions to provide the most complete picture of such an event. Their analysis provides possible explanations for X-ra ... more |
Einstein's Theory of Relativity, Critical For GPS, Seen In Distant Stars Huntsville AL (SPX) Oct 23, 2020 What do Albert Einstein, the Global Positioning System (GPS), and a pair of stars 200,000 trillion miles from Earth have in common? The answer is an effect from Einstein's General Theory of Relativity called the "gravitational redshift," where light is shifted to redder colors because of gravity. Using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, astronomers have discovered the phenomenon in two star ... more |
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A global collaboration to move artificial intelligence principles to practice Boston MA (SPX) Oct 20, 2020 Today, artificial intelligence - and the computing systems that underlie it - are more than just matters of technology; they are matters of state and society, of governance and the public interest. The choices that technologists, policymakers, and communities make in the next few years will shape the relationship between machines and humans for decades to come. The rapidly increasing appli ... more |
DARPA project strives for off-road unmanned vehicles that react like humans Washington DC (SPX) Oct 11, 2020 The self-driving car industry has made great autonomy advances, but mostly for well-structured and highly predictable environments. In complex militarily-relevant settings, robotic vehicles have not demonstrated operationally relevant speed and aren't autonomously reliable. While vehicle platforms that can handle difficult terrain exist, their autonomy algorithms and software often can't p ... more |
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