Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News
April 13, 2015
ROBO SPACE
DARPA Seeks to Create Software Systems That Could Last 100 Years
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 12, 2015
As modern software systems continue inexorably to increase in complexity and capability, users have become accustomed to periodic cycles of updating and upgrading to avoid obsolescence-if at some cost in terms of frustration. In the case of the U.S. military, having access to well-functioning software systems and underlying content is critical to national security, but updates are no less problematic than among civilian users and often demand considerable time and expense. That is why DARPA has an ... read more
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TIME AND SPACE

Unravelling relativistic effects in the heaviest actinide element
An international collaboration led by the research group of superheavy elements at the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA), Tokai, Japan has achieved the ionization potential measurement of lawrencium ... more
ROBO SPACE

Saucers, totes, cans, passion and dedication shape local students at JSC
Flying saucers have landed at Johnson Space Center-and they are taking over the minds of our youth. OK, so they are not really flying saucers. Those landed a few years back. Actually, this year they ... more
IRON AND ICE

ALMA captures Juno traveling through space
A series of images made with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) provides an unprecedented view of the surface of Juno, one of the largest members of our solar system's main aste ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


EXO LIFE

Aliens Are Probably Huge 650-Pound Creatures
New research proposes that if intelligent life outside Earth's atmosphere exists, chances are it's enormous. The findings from University of Barcelona cosmologist Dr. Fergus Simpson are based ... more


MERCURY RISING

Comms system critical to delaying MESSENGER's Mercury impact
MESSENGER's orbit-correction maneuver on April 6 was a nail biter. It was the 15th such maneuver since the spacecraft entered orbit about Mercury in 2011, and the third in a series of increasingly r ... more
Space Tech Expo - Design - Build - Test - Long Beach CA - May 19-21, 2015 Human 2 Mars Conference Mat 5-7 2015 - Washington DC 26th Space Cryogenics Workshop Training Space Professionals Since 1970

MARSDAILY

Mars has belts of glaciers consisting of frozen water
Mars has distinct polar ice caps, but Mars also has belts of glaciers at its central latitudes in both the southern and northern hemispheres. A thick layer of dust covers the glaciers, so they appea ... more
MOON DAILY

A new view of the moon's formation
Within the first 150 million years after our solar system formed, a giant body roughly the size of Mars struck and merged with Earth, blasting a huge cloud of rock and debris into space. This cloud ... 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
EXO WORLDS

Small solar eruptions can have profound effects on unprotected planets
While no one yet knows what's needed to build a habitable planet, it's clear that the interplay between the sun and Earth is crucial for making our planet livable - a balance between a sun that prov ... more
EXO WORLDS

The Solar System and Beyond is Awash in Water
As NASA missions explore our solar system and search for new worlds, they are finding water in surprising places. Water is but one piece of our search for habitable planets and life beyond Earth, ye ... more
MARSDAILY

Mars' dust-covered glacial belts may contain tons of water
New research shows Mars' buried glaciers contain enough ice to cover the entire planet with a coat three feet thick. The evidence also proves the dust-covered glacial belts to contain frozen water, not carbon dioxide. ... more
Army Network Modernization 2015 - Washington DC June 23-25
ROBO SPACE

Home Away From Home: NASA Spider-Droids to Build in Space
A company called Tethers Unlimited is developing a futuristic "Arachnid-like" droid system, funded by the North American Space Agency, that hopes to help humanity's journey into - and settlement in ... more
OUTER PLANETS

NASA Extends Campaign for Public to Name Features on Pluto
The public has until Friday, April 24 to help name new features on Pluto and its orbiting satellites as they are discovered by NASA's New Horizons mission. Announced in March, the agency wants to gi ... 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
IRON AND ICE

Dawn in Excellent Shape One Month After Ceres Arrival
Since its capture by the gravity of dwarf planet Ceres on March 6, NASA's Dawn spacecraft has performed flawlessly, continuing to thrust with its ion engine as planned. The thrust, combined with Cer ... more
MOON DAILY

Moon formed when young Earth and little sister collided
It's long been believed that Earth's moon was formed by a significant planetary collision with a Mars-like protoplanet called Theia. Now, a new study suggests the primordial protoplanet that crashed into a young Earth was quite similar in size and composition. ... more
MARSDAILY

Team Returning Orbiter to Duty After Computer Swap
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, at Mars since 2006, made an unplanned switch on Wednesday from one main computer to a redundant one onboard, triggering a hiatus in planned activities. Sens ... more
EXO LIFE

Life Needs An Atmosphere, But How Much Is Too Much
How much atmosphere is too much for life? As scientists discover more super-Earths and mini-Neptunes, the question becomes more relevant. Often, the rocky cores of these planets are believed to be a ... more
MERCURY RISING

Planned Maneuver Further Extends MESSENGER Orbital Operations
MESSENGER mission controllers at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md., conducted a maneuver yesterday to raise the spacecraft's minimum altitude sufficiently ... more

TECH SPACE

First ASU-built space instrument ready for final lab tests
The first space instrument to be built at Arizona State University has just received the electronics it will use in flight. This starts the final laboratory tests leading to its launch next year on ... more
ROBO SPACE

Ultra-realistic robot proves there's more than one way to scare a fish
In the world of the tiny zebrafish, the predatory red tiger oscar is the stuff of nightmares. And while the species has no natural reason to fear robots, researchers at the NYU Polytechnic School of ... 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
LAUNCH PAD

Soyuz Installed at Baikonur, Expected to Launch Wednesday

IRON AND ICE

Dawn orbiting high over the night side of Ceres

MARSDAILY

More evidence for groundwater on Mars

MARSDAILY

Scars on Mars from 2012 Rover Landing Fade - Usually

EXO LIFE

Europa's Elusive Water Plume Paints Grim Picture For Life

IRON AND ICE

NASA Releases Tool Enabling Citizen Scientists to Examine Asteroid Vesta

ROBO SPACE

Modular brains help organisms learn new skills without forgetting old skills

MARSDAILY

Bill Nye and others discussing taking humans to Mars by 2033

MOON DAILY

Will the moon's first inhabitants live in giant lava tubes?

MERCURY RISING

New explanation for Mercury's dark surface

Soft Landing on the Moon an Extraordinary Challenge

OSIRIS-REx Mission Passes Critical Milestone

Researchers build brain-machine interface to control prosthetic hand

Soft, energy-efficient robotic wings

Computer sharing of personality in sight: inventor

Curiosity Sniffs Out History of Martian Atmosphere

Warm or cold? Mars' history takes a watery new twist

Curiosity Eyes Prominent Mineral Veins on Mars

Media Spun Up on NASA Cutting-edge Mars Landing Technology

Saturn Spacecraft Returns to the Realm of Icy Moons

Artificial hand able to respond sensitively using smart metal wires

Flash Reformatted and Marathon Completed

Comet dust: Planet Mercury's 'invisible paint'

Stop blaming the moon

Goddard releases open source core flight software suite to public

Earthlike 'Star Wars' Tatooines may be common

Rover Amnesia Event Follows Latest Memory Reformatting

MESSENGER Completes 4,000th Orbit of Mercury

New Horizons Sampling 'Space Weather' on Approach to Pluto

Chinese scientists mull power station in space

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