Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News
January 01, 2022
TECH SPACE
China slams US after space station 'close encounters' with Musk's satellites



Beijing (AFP) Dec 28, 2021
Beijing on Tuesday accused the United States of irresponsible and unsafe conduct in space over two "close encounters" between the Chinese space station and satellites operated by Elon Musk's SpaceX. Tiangong, China's new space station, had to manoeuvre to avoid colliding with one Starlink satellite in July and with another in October, according to a note submitted by Beijing to the United Nations space agency this month. The note said the incidents "constituted dangers to the life or health of a ... read more

DRAGON SPACE
China heads launch list of space rockets
Beijing (XNA) Jan 01, 2022
China launched a Long March 3B carrier rocket at Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province early on Thursday, marking the completion of the country's annual launch schedule. The rock ... more
ROBO SPACE
Giving bug-like bots a boost
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 21, 2021
When it comes to robots, bigger isn't always better. Someday, a swarm of insect-sized robots might pollinate a field of crops or search for survivors amid the rubble of a collapsed building. M ... more
OUTER PLANETS
Testing radar to peer into Jupiter's moons
Paris (ESA) Dec 28, 2021
A 1:18 scale model of Juice, ESA's spacecraft to explore the Jupiter system, is being employed to test its radar antenna. The working version of the RIME instrument (Radar for Icy Moons Explor ... more
MARSDAILY
Experiments show algae can survive in Mars-like environment
Beijing (XNA) Dec 30, 2021
Chinese researchers have demonstrated that algae can survive in a Mars-like environment during four experiments since 2019, raising the hope that mankind might be able to turn the barren planet into ... more
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MOON DAILY


Carbonaceous chondrite impact responsible for lunar water: study

MARSDAILY


Perseverance Samples in Review: 2021

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MOON DAILY
NASA Selects New Members for Artemis Rover Science Team
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 28, 2021
When NASA's Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover, or VIPER, explores and samples the soils at the Moon's South Pole, scientists anticipate it will reveal answers to some of the Moon's end ... more
EXO WORLDS
Billions of starless planets haunt dark cloud cradles
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Dec 28, 2021
In Lovecraftian horror, the Universe is filled with "dark planets" ungraced by the light of a host star. New research shows that reality might be even scarier. An international team composed of Fren ... more
EXO WORLDS
ESO telescopes help uncover largest group of rogue planets yet
Munich, Germany (SPX) Dec 28, 2021
"We did not know how many to expect and are excited to have found so many," says Nuria Miret-Roig, an astronomer at the Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Bordeaux, France and the University of Vienna, ... more
MARSDAILY
An icy spring at the Martian South Pole
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
In addition to its enormous volcanoes, huge rift valley systems, and dried-up crater lakes and river valleys, the ice caps at the north and south poles of Mars have been the subject of intensive sci ... more
MARSDAILY
Red velvet Mars
Paris (ESA) Dec 27, 2021
Like a sprinkle of powdered sugar on a rich red velvet cake, this scene from the ESA/Roscosmos ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter captures the contrasting colours of bright white water-ice against the rusty ... more
EXO WORLDS


Lost in space: Rocky planets formed from missing solar system material

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MOON DAILY
MIT engineers test an idea for a new hovering Lunar rover
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
Aerospace engineers at MIT are testing a new concept for a hovering rover that levitates by harnessing the moon's natural charge. Because they lack an atmosphere, the moon and other airless bo ... more
TECH SPACE
RUAG technology helped launch Webb into space
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
Technology from RUAG Space protected the James Webb Space Telescope during launch and flight into space. A payload adapter placed the observatory into orbit. The launch happened on December 25. ... more
MARSDAILY
Perseverance and the Search Amongst the Sand
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
Since February 18, 2021, Perseverance has been exploring the Jezero crater floor, including an exposure of rock and sand that the rover's science team calls Seitah (which means "amongst the sand" in ... more
MARSDAILY
Holiday Prepping on Mar: Sols 3333-3343
Pasadena CA (JPL) Dec 23, 2021
On Mars, like Earth, we are prepping for the holidays. Today we planned an eleven sol plan which will take us to the end of December. For this plan, the ENV instruments take the main stage, with lot ... more
IRON AND ICE
DART returns first images from space
Pasadena CA (JPL) Dec 27, 2021
Just two weeks after launching from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft has opened its "eye" and returned its first images from space ... more
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The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
Perseverance Samples in Review: 2021
Pasadena CA (JPL) Dec 29, 2021
As the 2021 calendar year comes to a close, it's nice to sit back and reflect on all the progress we've made on Mars this year. It's been a busy ~300 sols for both Perseverance and our helicopter sidekick, Ingenuity! One of Perseverance's mission objectives is to collect and store samples of the martian surface for eventual return back to Earth as part of the Mars Sample Return campaign. T ... more
+ Perseverance and the Search Amongst the Sand
+ Holiday Prepping on Mar: Sols 3333-3343
+ Experiments show algae can survive in Mars-like environment
+ An icy spring at the Martian South Pole
+ Red velvet Mars
+ Out of the Shadows of the Maria Gordon notch: Sols 3328-3329
+ Cliffs and notches keeps Curiosity team busy: Sols 3330-3332




MIT engineers test an idea for a new hovering Lunar rover
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
Aerospace engineers at MIT are testing a new concept for a hovering rover that levitates by harnessing the moon's natural charge. Because they lack an atmosphere, the moon and other airless bodies such as asteroids can build up an electric field through direct exposure to the sun and surrounding plasma. On the moon, this surface charge is strong enough to levitate dust more than 1 meter ab ... more
+ NASA Selects New Members for Artemis Rover Science Team
+ Carbonaceous chondrite impact responsible for lunar water: study
+ Opening a 50-year-old Christmas present from the Moon
+ Preparations underway for moon landing
+ Production of electricity on the Moon is in the hands of Estonians
+ CesiumAstro accelerates Active Phased Array Payload development for Lunar applications
+ Lunar robot wars
Testing radar to peer into Jupiter's moons
Paris (ESA) Dec 28, 2021
A 1:18 scale model of Juice, ESA's spacecraft to explore the Jupiter system, is being employed to test its radar antenna. The working version of the RIME instrument (Radar for Icy Moons Exploration), incorporating a 16-m long version of the straight 'dipole' boom seen here under the model spacecraft, will probe up to 9 km deep under the surfaces of the gas giant's main 'Galilean' moons. ... more
+ Looking Back, Looking Forward To New Horizons
+ NASA's Juno Spacecraft 'Hears' Jupiter's Moon
+ Deep Mantle Krypton Reveals Earth's Outer Solar System Ancestry
+ Cracking the mystery of nitrogen ice dynamics on Pluto
+ Planet decision that booted out Pluto is rooted in folklore, astrology
+ Are Water Plumes Spraying from Europa
+ Science results offer first 3D view of Jupiter's atmosphere


Billions of starless planets haunt dark cloud cradles
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Dec 28, 2021
In Lovecraftian horror, the Universe is filled with "dark planets" ungraced by the light of a host star. New research shows that reality might be even scarier. An international team composed of French, Japanese, and Spanish astronomers has found about 100 planets floating freely in space rather than orbiting stars. Extrapolating this sample to the rest of the Milky Way Galaxy suggests that there ... more
+ Lost in space: Rocky planets formed from missing solar system material
+ ESO telescopes help uncover largest group of rogue planets yet
+ Astronomers Detect Signature of Magnetic Field on an Exoplanet
+ Could acid-neutralizing life-forms make habitable pockets in Venus' clouds?
+ Founding members of world's first independent space science mission confirmed
+ Life arose on hydrogen energy
+ Stellar "ashfall" could help distant planets grow
Scientists at PPPL and Princeton University demonstrate a novel rocket for deep-space exploration
Plainsboro NJ (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
The growing interest in deep-space exploration has sparked the need for powerful long-lived rocket systems to drive spacecraft through the cosmos. Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) have now developed a tiny modified version of a plasma-based propulsion system called a Hall thruster that both increases the lifetime of the rocket and pro ... more
+ Precise Ariane 5 launch likely to extend Webb's expected lifetime
+ NASA Builds Artemis III Core Stage Forward Skirt
+ Virgin Orbit expected to list on NASDAQ
+ Cargo Dragon Docks to Station with Brand New Science
+ Astra Space faces critics, skeptics as it plans Florida launch
+ Bezos' Blue Origin teams up with U.S. military 'rocket cargo' program
+ Musk says his 'tiny' satellites can't block any rival spacecraft




China heads launch list of space rockets
Beijing (XNA) Jan 01, 2022
China launched a Long March 3B carrier rocket at Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province early on Thursday, marking the completion of the country's annual launch schedule. The rocket blasted off at 0:43 am and transported the Communication Technology Demonstrator 9 experimental satellite into a geosynchronous orbit, China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, the nation's lead ... more
+ Shenzhou XIII taikonauts complete second extravehicular mission
+ New technologies make Chinese astronauts' in-orbit lives easier
+ On they march as China records 401st flight of Long March rocket family
+ China's Long March carrier rocket embarks on 400th mission
+ First crew of space station provide a full update on China's progress
+ Milestone mission for China's first commercial rocket company
+ Chinese astronauts to give space lecture on Dec. 9
DART returns first images from space
Pasadena CA (JPL) Dec 27, 2021
Just two weeks after launching from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft has opened its "eye" and returned its first images from space - a major operational milestone for the spacecraft and DART team. After the violent vibrations of launch and the extreme temperature shift to minus 80 degrees C in space, scientists and enginee ... more
+ Quadrantids offer winter meteor spectacle
+ A Christmas comet for Solar Orbiter
+ Comets' heads can be green, but never their tails
+ How NASA's Psyche Mission Will Explore an Unexplored World
+ DiCaprio and Lawrence big up science in doomsday comedy
+ Watching the Blink of a Star to Size Up Asteroids for NASA's Lucy Mission
+ Rock composition determines how deadly a meteorite impact is




AFRL partners with UNM for new Directed Energy Center
Kirtland AFB NM (SPX) Nov 04, 2021
The Air Force Research Laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate is partnering with The University of New Mexico (UNM) to establish a center for directed energy studies, a congressionally-funded endeavor. The Directed Energy Center will be based at UNM and jointly managed by UNM's School of Engineering and UNM's Center for High Technology Materials (CHTM). AFRL is recognized as the nation's ... more
+ Army successfully tests high-energy laser weapon
L3Harris Completes Final US Missile Defense Agency Satellite Design Milestone
Melbourne FL (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
L3Harris Technologies has completed the final major design milestone on the U.S. Missile Defense Agency's (MDA) Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor (HBTSS) program Phase IIb On-orbit Prototype Demonstration and has already begun building the demonstration satellite. Completing the CDR is the final design milestone ensuring performance, cost and schedule requirements can be met b ... more
+ Northrop and Raytheon complete Next Generation Interceptor review
+ Northrop Grumman completes environmental testing for Next Gen OPIR GEO payload
+ India May Become 1st in Line to Buy Russian Air Defense System S-500
+ US Missile Defense Agency announces the initial fielding of the LRDR in Alaska
+ Northrop Grumman and Raytheon Technologies Team Approved for Next Generation Interceptor Digital Software Factory
+ Space Development Agency Approves L3Harris' Missile-Tracking Satellite Design
+ Russia launches classified military satellite




San Andreas Fault-like tectonics discovered on Saturn moon Titan
Honolulu HI (SPX) Oct 18, 2021
Strike-slip faulting, the type of motion common to California's well-known San Andreas Fault, was reported recently to possibly occur on Titan, Saturn's largest moon. New research, led by planetary scientists from the University of Hawai?i at Manoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST), suggests this tectonic motion may be active on Titan, deforming the icy surface. On m ... more
+ Titan-in-a-glass experiments hint at mineral makeup of Saturn moon
+ Saturn makes waves in its own rings
+ Dragonfly mission to Titan announces big science goals
+ Icequakes likely rumble along geyser-spitting fractures in Saturn's icy moon Enceladus
+ Methane in the plumes of Saturn's moon Enceladus: Possible signs of life?
The secret of ultralight but stiff sandwich nanotubes
Groningen, Netherlands (SPX) Oct 27, 2021
It is an intuitive rule of thumb: if you reduce the density of a material, its stiffness will also be reduced. But scientists from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US noticed that materials that are based on sandwich nanotubes retained their stiffness at lower densities. Modelling by materials scientists from the University of Groningen (The Netherlands) revealed how this ... more
+ AFRL Nano Team takes lead in building stronger ties with India
+ Striking Gold: A Pathway to Stable, High-Activity Catalysts from Gold Nanoclusters
+ Tracking the movement of a single nanoparticle
+ Researchers demonstrate technique for recycling nanowires in electronics
+ Custom-made MIT tool probes materials at the nanoscale




LCO Scientists Confirm the Discovery of the First Moving Microlensing Arcs
Goleta CA (SPX) Dec 09, 2021
On April 18, 2019, the European Space Agency's Gaia Mission alerted astronomers worldwide to an unusually bright but fleeting celestial event: the gravitational microlensing event Gaia19bld. The temporary, chance alignment between two unrelated star systems produced twin images of the background star and gave scientists their first opportunity to actually observe the arc-shaped images move in re ... more
+ LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration announces 90 gravitational wave discoveries to date
+ Gravitational 'kick' may explain the strange shape at the center of Andromeda
+ Towards the detection of the nanohertz gravitational-wave background
+ New spin on space research
+ Uncovering the secrets of ultra-low frequency gravitational waves
+ ESA and Mattel's Barbie in zero-g
+ China unveils gravitational-wave research center in Guangdong
Astronomers capture black hole eruption spanning 16 times the full Moon in the sky
Perth, Australia (SPX) Dec 27, 2021
Astronomers have produced the most comprehensive image of radio emission from the nearest actively feeding supermassive black hole to Earth. The emission is powered by a central black hole in the galaxy Centaurus A, about 12 million light years away. As the black hole feeds on in-falling gas, it ejects material at near light-speed, causing 'radio bubbles' to grow over hundreds of mil ... more
+ Quantum marbles in a bowl of light
+ 'Cyborg' artist who 'hears' colour turns to time travel
+ Are black holes and dark matter the same
+ Astronomers Spy Quartet of Cavities from Giant Black Holes
+ Closing in on the first light in the Universe
+ Super-bright stellar explosion is likely a dying star giving birth to a black hole or neutron star
+ Challenging Einstein's greatest theory with extreme stars




Giving bug-like bots a boost
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 21, 2021
When it comes to robots, bigger isn't always better. Someday, a swarm of insect-sized robots might pollinate a field of crops or search for survivors amid the rubble of a collapsed building. MIT researchers have demonstrated diminutive drones that can zip around with bug-like agility and resilience, which could eventually perform these tasks. The soft actuators that propel these microrobot ... more
+ Food prep robot 'Alfred' joins kitchen staff at Travis Air Force Base
+ NUS engineers bring a soft touch to commercial robotics
+ Consciousness in humans, animals and artificial intelligence
+ Mind-controlled robots now one step closer
+ Fugro's remote space operations complex to be located in Perth, Australia
+ Grip or slip; robots need a human sense of touch
+ Machines that see the world more like humans do
Australia's First MQ-4C Triton Takes Shape
Palmdale CA (SPX) Dec 20, 2021
Northrop Grumman Corporation recently completed a significant milestone in the production of Australia's first MQ-4C Triton high-altitude, long-endurance (HALE) aircraft when the aircraft fuselage was mounted onto Triton's unique one-piece wing. Once completed and delivered, Triton's powerful payload and endurance will provide the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) with the ability to detect and ... more
+ China's high-flying drone giant DJI in US cross-hairs
+ Northrop Grumman Global Hawk to Expand Participation in SkyRange Program
+ Armed with drones, Turkey explores African arms sales
+ OFFSET Swarms take flight in final field experiment
+ University of Guam Drone Corps produces first batch of FAA-certified drone pilots
+ China-developed UAV completes marine meteorological observation test
+ BRIPAC evaluates the capabilities of the Passer UAS within the framework of the RAPAZ Program


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