NASA demos 2020’s 12-wheeled, pressurized lunar rover concept car

October 26th, 2008 by

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NASA demos 2020's 12-wheeled, pressurized lunar rover concept car

We’ve all seen black and white footage of astronauts on the moon hot doggin’ it over craters and dunes in a trick electric buggy, but that was over thirty years ago. In 2020, when a new generation of astronauts head there, they’ll need a new generation of whip too, and that’s just what NASA recently demonstrated to the public. Called the Small Pressurized Rover Concept, it looks to be an evolution of the 12-wheeled Chariot prototype we saw earlier this year, pimped out with an air-tight cabin that sleeps two and some bitchin’ gold dubs. Inside a pair of explorers can go lunar RVing for up to two weeks at a time, covering 625 miles on one charge at a leisurely 6 mph, hopping out through rear-mounted (non-next-gen) spacesuits when something interesting catches their eye. You know, like aliens or something. Could happen.

[Thanks, Peter D.]

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Posted in NASA, moon, lunar vehicle, LunarVehicle, lunar rover, LunarRover, small pressurized rover concept, SmallPressurizedRoverConcept | No Comments »

NASA looking to go nuclear on the moon

September 11th, 2008 by

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As we’ve seen, NASA has some pretty big plans for the moon (which may or may not come to fruition), and it’s now finally offering up a solution for how it might keep everything powered. Turns out, it’s looking at going nuclear — with a fission surface power system, to be specific. That system, seen above in an artist’s concept, would consist of nuclear reactor buried below the lunar surface (which provides some handy radiation shielding), with the engines that convert the heat energy into electricity placed in the tower above the reactor — those long radiators would “radiate into space” any leftover heat energy that wasn’t converted to electricity. All told, the system promises to generate a steady 40 kilowatts of electric power, or enough for about eight houses on Earth, but with NASA’s various power-saving measures, they say that’d be more than enough to sustain a serious lunar outpost.

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Posted in NASA, moon, nuclear, fission surface power system, FissionSurfacePowerSystem, nuclear power, NuclearPower | No Comments »

Next-gen NASA spacesuit contract mothballed

August 15th, 2008 by

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It may be true that no one can hear you scream in space, but we’d be wagering that a whole lot of people can hear the yelling coming out of Houston-based Oceaneering International, Inc., who just lost their two month old $745 million NASA contract to build the next-gen space suit. Of course, the bid was not without its fair share of bitching and moaning by competing contractors (apparently long time space suit-makers Hamilton Sundstrand and ILC Dover made a big stink after the contract was awarded to their upstart competitor), but them’s the breaks when your gear’s headed to space. Too bad though, we were really looking forward to the gear — especially since now we have absolutely nothing to wear to the astro-prom.

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Posted in space, NASA, moon, oceaneering international, OceaneeringInternational, orion, spacesuit, space suit | No Comments »

NASA delays unmanned trip to the Moon, Moon delays unmanned trip to Earth

August 15th, 2008 by

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NASA has delayed plans to send an unmanned robotic spacecraft to the Moon — and the pause in action will cost $7 million a month, say reports. According to various news outlets, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter was set to blast off for the Big Cheese this December, but officials have decided a February 27th launch will provide the team with more wiggle room. The $491 million device is being sent skyward to circle the Moon’s poles and map a safe touchdown spot for actual humans, set to journey up onto the Lunar surface sometime in 2020. In addition to the Orbiter, the space agency plans to launch an impactor probe into one of the Moon’s poles in search of water ice. It should be a blast.

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Posted in NASA, delay, moon, postponed, impactor probe, ImpactorProbe, Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, LunarReconnaissanceOrbiter, moon orbit, MoonOrbit, postponement | No Comments »

SpaceX conducts successful static launch of Falcon 9 rocket

August 2nd, 2008 by

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SpaceX Falcon 9

Remember Space Exploration Technologies Corp, otherwise known as SpaceX? You know, the private space transport company started by PayPal founder Elon Musk that won the NASA Commercial Comercial Orbital Transportation Services competition for its Falcon rocket? Last we heard from SpaceX it had lost Falcon 1 during a test launch, but this week its Falcon 9 launch vehicle was successfully fired up. While it didn’t go anywhere, the successful static launch was good news for the company, and the test run was even two months ahead of schedule, which could mean good things for the rockets’ ultimate place in runs to the International Space Station once the Space Shuttle goes out of service in 2010.

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Posted in NASA, international space station, InternationalSpaceStation, space shuttle, SpaceShuttle, falcon 9, Falcon9, space x, SpaceX | No Comments »

NASA says Phoenix lander is sampling water on Mars

July 31st, 2008 by

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Yep, just like we’d heard, the Phoenix lander has identified water in a soil sample it collected in Mars earlier, and NASA’s extended the mission for another 90 days to go look for more. There’s no analysis of the ice yet, but it doesn’t look like there’s any organic materials in the sample, and it’ll take another three to four weeks before there’s any more data to reveal. Hopefully that means we’ll be packing up our silver go-go boots and taking off for our fabulous future lives on Mars in a month, but we’ll see how things go.

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NASA to hold Pheonix press conference tomorrow, water on the brain?

July 31st, 2008 by

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Phoenix finds water

It’s been a while since we’ve reported about the doings of our robotic friend on Mars, but a press conference tomorrow (Thursday) could uncover Phoenix’s first positive report of water on the red planet. NASA’s conference will be held at 2 p.m. Eastern Thursday and we’re hearing that Pheonix Mission is ready to report that water ice is not only confirmed, but the research robot has dug some ice out of a trench, heated it, and confirmed that it is, in fact water. If this all holds true, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory will be able to determine whether or not the atmosphere could sustain life and lead to manned missions to Mars. We call shotgun.

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Posted in NASA, mars, jet propulsion labor..., JetPropulsionLabor..., pheonix, pheonix lander, PheonixLander | No Comments »

NASA to hold Phoenix press conference tomorrow, water on the brain?

July 31st, 2008 by

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Phoenix finds water

It’s been a while since we’ve reported about the doings of our robotic friend on Mars, but a press conference tomorrow (Thursday) could uncover Phoenix’s first positive report of water on the red planet. NASA’s conference will be held at 2 p.m. Eastern Thursday and we’re hearing that Phoenix Mission is ready to report that water ice is not only confirmed, but the research robot has dug some ice out of a trench, heated it, and confirmed that it is, in fact water. If this all holds true, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory will be able to determine whether or not the atmosphere could sustain life and lead to manned missions to Mars. We call shotgun.

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Audi unveils enviable MMI for upcoming A8 sedan

July 21st, 2008 by

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For the acronym-challenged, Audi is getting serious about its Multi Media Interface. The automaker’s present system is widely regarded as the best of the best already, but it’s staying one step ahead of itself with the revamped version prepped for the A8 luxury sedan. Within the whip, you’ll find a 7-inch LCD with an 800 x 480 resolution alongside a DVD drive, 40GB internal hard drive, Dolby Digital 5.1 support, optional analog / digital TV tuner, Bluetooth, twin CPUs (800MHz and 500MHz), NVIDIA graphics for “genuine 3D maps” and an optional (but necessary, really) Audi Music Interface for connecting your favorite PMP. For those uninterested in the A8 (but suddenly obsessed with this new MMI), hang tight — it will be hitting other Audi vehicles here soon.

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Posted in navi, navigation, NASA, in-car, nav, audi, A8, MMI | No Comments »

OSU researcher developing GPS-like system for moon-bound astronauts

July 21st, 2008 by

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GPS on the moon may seem a bit far-fetched… that is, until you remember the US military’s plans to launch a WiFi router into space. The same Ohio State University researcher who developed software for the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity is now developing a GPS-like system that would enable astronauts to navigate terrain as if they were simply routing themselves through a plot of land on Earth. Because of the moon’s location (we’re simplifying things here), Ron Li is having to create a similar system (read: not bona fide GPS) that relies on “signals from a set of sensors including lunar beacons, stereo cameras, and orbital imaging devices” in order to provide navigational output. Everyone involved is hoping to have it operational by 2020 (the next planned trip to the moon), but the team will be stuck testing in the Mojave Desert. Bummer.

[Via Physorg]

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Posted in university, astronaut, space, gps, NASA, moon, galaxy, osu, Ohio State University, OhioStateUniversity | No Comments »

OSU researcher developing GPS-like system for moon-bound astronauts

July 21st, 2008 by

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GPS on the moon may seem a bit far-fetched… that is, until you remember the US military’s plans to launch a WiFi router into space. The same Ohio State University researcher who developed software for the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity is now developing a GPS-like system that would enable astronauts to navigate terrain as if they were simply routing themselves through a plot of land on Earth. Because of the moon’s location (we’re simplifying things here), Ron Li is having to create a similar system (read: not bona fide GPS) that relies on “signals from a set of sensors including lunar beacons, stereo cameras, and orbital imaging devices” in order to provide navigational output. Everyone involved is hoping to have it operational by 2020 (the next planned trip to the moon), but the team will be stuck testing in the Mojave Desert. Bummer.

[Via Physorg]

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Posted in university, astronaut, space, gps, NASA, moon, galaxy, osu, Ohio State University, OhioStateUniversity | No Comments »

Mars Phoenix lander saves itself with some quick thinking

July 16th, 2008 by

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The Phoenix lander has already proven its mettle by finding ice on Mars, and now it’s gone and shown off its quick-thinking skills by shutting down its robotic arm after receiving a command that could have permanently damaged it. The lander apparently did it’s best to find a workaround first, however, but ultimately determined that any further movement would have bent its wrist out of shape. That left NASA engineers scrambling yesterday to come up with some new instructions to send to the lander, and they’re now simply waiting to see if they meet with the robot’s approval.

[Via Slashdot]

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Posted in NASA, mars, phoenix lander, PhoenixLander, mars phoenix, MarsPhoenix, phoenix mars lander, PhoenixMarsLander | No Comments »

New solar sail aims to not repeat recent history

July 4th, 2008 by

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Attempts to launch a solar sail into space haven’t exactly been met with success in the past, but NASA now looks set to try to notch one up in the win column, with the agency reportedly on track for a launch of its own as soon as July 29th. As the name suggests, its new NanoSail-D is smaller than previous sails, with it consisting of four 3-meter wide sails made of a plastic film coated with aluminum. Also, like similar missions, this one is primarily a proof of concept one, which NASA hopes will demonstrate the feasibility of deploying sails in orbit, including the possibility of using them to bring satellites back down to Earth when they’ve outlived their usefulness to keep space a bit tidier. As NewScientist points out, however, NASA already has some of the odds stacked against it, with its launch craft, the Falcon 1, having failed on its two launch attempts so far.

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Research institute hopes to send “brain breathalyzer” into space

July 3rd, 2008 by

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While it’s not nearly exciting as their Space Cycle (but really, what is?), the National Space Biomedical Research Institute’s new brain scanner here looks to fill in a niche of its own nonetheless and, if the institute has its way, it could actually find its way into space. Described as a “brain breathalyzer,” the device promises to monitor astronauts for signs of brain injury, depression and mental fatigue, which could allow mission control to determine if they’re capable of carrying out a mission or not. That’s done with the use of an optical scanner that sends weak pulses of near-infrared light into the brain, which gets reflected back to determine the amount of oxygen in the blood. While NASA isn’t fully sold on the idea just yet, it apparently is interested enough to shell out $400,000 to further the development of the scanner, which it hopes will also eventually be able to monitor other vital signs like blood pressure and heart rate.

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Posted in space, NASA, brain scanner, BrainScanner, national space biomedical research institute, NationalSpaceBiomedicalResearchInstitute, NSBRI | No Comments »

NASA creates hyperwall-2, the world’s highest resolution visualization system

June 27th, 2008 by

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Leave it to space nerds with money to come up with the world’s highest resolution visualization system. NASA’s Advanced Supercomputing Division at Ames has created the 128-screen hyperwall-2, a mega display capable of rendering one quarter billion pixels. Hyperwall-2 measures 23- x 10-feet of LCD goodness, and is powered by 128 GPUs and 1,024 processor cores with 74 teraflops of peak processing power. To top things off, 475 terabytes of storage keep the system rolling. All in all, hyperwall-2 has more than 100 times the processing power of its poor predecessor, hyperwall, from 2002. The elder hyperwall was unavailable for comment and is most likely on an alcoholic bender somewhere, complaining about “kids these days.”

[Thanks, james]

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Posted in lcd, NASA, nas, ames, hyperwall, hyperwall-2 | No Comments »

Mars Phoenix lander discovers ice on Mars

June 19th, 2008 by

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It’s only fitting that the glorious news of water ice on Mars was broke over Twitter this evening, via the Mars Phoenix lander’s own first-person ramblings. Apparently Mars Phoenix was keeping an eye on some white patches it uncovered the other day, only to discover they’d disappeared today. According to the scientist folk over at NASA, that means those white patches must’ve been ice, which dissipated once uncovered. Now Mars Phoenix still has the considerable task of uncovering more ice and sampling it, but the mission is ahead of schedule and NASA has already identified a hard patch of ground it wants to dig into. Congrats to Mars Phoenix and all the fine folks at NASA, now be sure to watch out for the cave-dwelling little green men!

[Via Wired Science]

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NASA’s new suits are one giant leap for space fashion

June 13th, 2008 by

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var digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/space/NASA_s_new_suits_are_one_giant_leap_for_space_fashion’; NASA just awarded its future spacesuit contract to Oceaneering International. The US firm must now design, test, and produce two suits — the default suit (pictured after the break) worn on-board for launch and landing and a second, more versatile, cheese-proof suit worn during space walks and upon the surface of the moon. The suits must be ready for the first scheduled launch of the Orion Space Capsule in 2015. The contract is valued at the government special price of just $745 million. Hey, we have to keep up appearances at the International Space Station, you know.

Continue reading NASA’s new suits are one giant leap for space fashion

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Posted in NASA, moon, SpaceStation, oceaneering international, OceaneeringInternational, orion, spacesuit | No Comments »

International Space Station’s lavatory gets repaired, another saga ends

June 4th, 2008 by

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We can’t say we’re terribly saddened that this riveting caper has finally ended — after all, the poor crew needs a reliable place to unload, right? Shortly after the space shuttle Discovery delivered a new pump for the jury-rigged commode, Oleg Kononenko — who we hear is now widely regarded as a galactic hero — spent around two hours installing the hardware and running a trio of tests. After everything was tightened up and functioning as advertised, the crew presumably relieved themselves just before carrying on with the installation of the recently acquired Kibo lab. Crisis averted.

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Posted in Comedy, Funny, problem, space, NASA, fix, space station, SpaceStation, solution, toilet, bathroom, international space station, fixed | No Comments »

Space shuttle Discovery delivers new toilet pump to International Space Station

June 3rd, 2008 by

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Russian space toiletIn what is becoming a fascinating space-poop drama, the International Space Station had a fresh toilet pump delivered today by space shuttle Discovery. For the past couple weeks, astronauts were forced to perform manual flushes, but this pump promises to make things go down a bit easier. We’re still under the impression that the toilet will be replaced in the Fall, so more relief is sure to come.

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Posted in Funny, problem, space, NASA, toilet, bathroom, iss, international space station, InternationalSpaceStation, space shuttle discovery, SpaceShuttleDiscovery | No Comments »

International Space Station’s commode gets fixed

May 28th, 2008 by

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It’s amazing how quickly humans can remedy problems when really placed in a bind, and rather than waiting for supplies to come up with Discovery next week, crew members aboard the International Space Station were able to solve their little dilemma already. Reportedly, cosmonauts were able to cure whatever was ailing the temporarily non-functioning john, enabling those stuck in space to urinate freely. Thankfully, the seven-year old toilet is due to be replaced with a fresh new one this Fall, and we’d say the replacement couldn’t arrive soon enough.

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Posted in Comedy, Funny, problem, space, NASA, fix, space station, SpaceStation, solution, toilet, bathroom, iss, international space station, fixed | No Comments »

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