Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News
February 09, 2015
IRON AND ICE
Number of Known Accessible Near-Earth Asteroids Doubles Since 2010
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 10, 2015
NASA performed the first Near-Earth Object Human Space Flight Accessible Targets Study (NHATS) in September/October of 2010, and 666 of the known near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) were identified as meeting the NHATS criteria for mission accessibility (classifying those NEAs as "NHATS-compliant"). These are asteroids in near-Earth orbits that are more dynamically accessible (requiring less time and energy to visit) than round-trip spacecraft missions to Mars. At that time, just over 7,000 NEAs had been ... read more
Previous Issues Feb 07 Feb 06 Feb 05 Feb 04 Feb 03
MARSDAILY

NASA's Curiosity Analyzing Sample of Martian Mountain
The second bite of a Martian mountain taken by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover hints at long-ago effects of water that was more acidic than any evidenced in the rover's first taste of Mount Sharp, a lay ... more
MARSDAILY

NASA Spacecraft Completes 40,000 Mars Orbits
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter passed a mission milestone of 40,000 orbits on Feb. 7, 2015, in its ninth year of returning information about the atmosphere, surface and subsurface of Mars, from ... more
ROBO SPACE

Researchers determine how the brain controls robotic grasping tools
Grasping an object involves a complex network of brain functions. First, visual cues are processed in specialized areas of the brain. Then, other areas of the brain use these signals to control the ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


MOON DAILY

NASA releases video of the far side of the Moon
NASA has released a video showing what it looks like on the side of the moon humans can't see from Earth. ... more


MOON DAILY

US Issuing Licenses for Mineral Mining on Moon
The United States government is taking a new and early approach to spur commercial development of space. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has started issuing companies licenses to own land ... more
Military Radar Summit 2015 26th Space Cryogenics Workshop Small Modular Reactors - USA - 2015 Nuclear Decommissioning Conference Europe May 2015
Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review
EXO WORLDS

Scientists predict earth-like planets around most stars
Planetary scientists have calculated that there are hundreds of billions of Earth-like planets in our galaxy which might support life. The new research, led by PhD student Tim Bovaird and Asso ... more
IRON AND ICE

Dawn Gets Closer Views of Ceres
NASA's Dawn spacecraft, on approach to dwarf planet Ceres, has acquired its latest and closest-yet snapshot of this mysterious world. The image of Ceres, taken on Feb. 4, 2015, from a distance of ab ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
U.S. defense in free fall
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan sign mutual defense pact
Brazil, Chile sign defense agreement
TECH SPACE

SSC expands at the Inuvik Satellite Station Facility
The Swedish Space Corporation (SSC) is increasing its capacity at the Inuvik Satellite Station Facility in Inuvik, Canada, with the addition of a new multi-mission antenna. The expansion is driven b ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Fixed astronomical clock vital for galactic history
Scientists have settled a long running debate on one of the fundamental time measures for galactic history - the half-life of a radioactive isotope of iron. The new, accurate figure for the ir ... more
TECH SPACE

Spacecraft Power Systems
The power system is one of the fundamental systems required to operate any spacecraft. Many satellite engineers, who work on other systems, tend to take spacecraft power for granted. However, there ... more
Training Space Professionals Since 1970

ROBO SPACE

U.S. Navy unveils firefighting robot SAFFiR
At the Naval Future Force Science & Technology Expo, held Wednesday and Thursday in Washington, D.C., military engineers showed off their latest invention - a firefighting robot. ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Cool clocks pave the way to new measurements of the earth
We all like to know our watches keep the time well, but Hidetoshi Katori, of RIKEN's Quantum Metrology Laboratory and the University of Tokyo's Graduate School of Engineering, is taking precision to ... more
24/7 News Coverage
GUARDIAN Tsunami Detection Tech Catches Wave in Real Time
Galileo daughter mission named Celeste to strengthen navigation resilience
How quantum computers can be validated when solving unsolvable problems
ROBO SPACE

HAPTIX Starts Work to Provide Prosthetic Hands with Sense of Touch
Despite recent advances in technology for upper-limb prostheses, artificial arms and hands are still unable to provide users with sensory feedback, such as the "feel" of things being touched or awar ... more
ROBO SPACE

Human insights inspire solutions for household robots
People typically consider doing the laundry to be a boring chore. But laundry is far from boring for artificial intelligence (AI) researchers like Siddharth Srivastava, a scientist at the United Tec ... more
ROBO SPACE

Tiny robotic 'hands' could improve cancer diagnostics, drug delivery
Many people imagine robots today as clunky, metal versions of humans, but scientists are forging new territory in the field of 'soft robotics.' One of the latest advances is a flexible, microscopic ... more
ROBO SPACE

Octopus robot makes waves with ultra-fast propulsion
Scientists have developed an octopus-like robot, which can zoom through water with ultra-fast propulsion and acceleration never before seen in man-made underwater vehicles. Most fast aquatic a ... more
LAUNCH PAD

Soyuz Installed at Baikonur, Expected to Launch Wednesday
The Soyuz-2.1A carrier rocket has been successfully installed at the launch site at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and is scheduled for launch on October 29, the press service of the Russian ... more

OUTER PLANETS

New Horizons snaps new images of Pluto en route to historic flyby
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft returned its first new images of Pluto on Wednesday, as the probe closes in on the dwarf planet. Although still just a dot along with its largest moon, Charon, the ima ... more
MOON DAILY

LRO finds lunar hydrogen more abundant on Moon's pole-facing slopes
Space travel is difficult and expensive - it would cost thousands of dollars to launch a bottle of water to the moon. The recent discovery of hydrogen-bearing molecules, possibly including water, on ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
Ohio State scientists advance focus on nuclear propulsion
Mixing neutrinos of colliding neutron stars changes how merger unfolds
China launches experimental satellites to enhance mobile space internet
MARSDAILY

Mars Orbiter Spies Curiosity Rover at Work

TECH SPACE

SMAP Satellite utilizes Northrop Grumman's AstroMesh Reflector

TECH SPACE

Fajr satellite serves no military purpose

EXO WORLDS

"Vulcan Planets" - Inside-Out Formation of Super-Earths

MARSDAILY

Meteorite may represent 'bulk background' of Mars' battered crust

TECH SPACE

Eyes In The Sky: Britain's GCHQ Sets Sights on Space

ROBO SPACE

Robot acquires chef skills via YouTube instructional vids

TECH SPACE

Vanguard Delivers Advanced EHF Bus Structure Assembly

EXO WORLDS

Smaller Gas Giants Could Support Life

EXO WORLDS

Habitable Evaporated Cores

Cassini Catches Titan Naked in the Solar Wind

Dawn ahead!

Kepler astronomers discover ancient star with 5 Earth-size planets

Gully patterns document Martian climate cycles

Several Drives This Week Put Opportunity Near Marathon Distance

Will NASA's TESS Spacecraft Revolutionize Exoplanet Hunting?

Surface composition of BL86 studies during Earth flyby

The two faces of Mars

Ancient star system has Earth-sized planets forming near start of universe

Something Special in the Air

Canadian students design robotic sailboat for Atlantic challenge

Integral manoeuvres for the future

More Astronauts for China

New research re-creates planet formation in the lab

Planetary Society announces test flight for LightSail

Asteroid That Flew Past Earth Has Moon

Gigantic ring system around J1407b much larger, heavier than Saturn's

NASA craft set to beam home close-ups of Pluto

Scientists slow down light particles

Scientists befuddled by mysterious white spot on Ceres

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