Mice That Spend a Month in Space Were Able to Reproduce Once They Got Back to Earth – Universe Today

A team of Japanese researchers have used sperm from mice that spent time aboard the International Space Station (ISS) to fertilize female mice back on Earth. While previous research has shown that freeze-dried mouse sperm stored in space can experience radiation damage, these results show that the sperm from live mice may not suffer the same damage.

While the freeze-dried mouse sperm in a previous study was stored in space for 9 months and was damaged by radiation, the live mice in this study spent only 35 days on the ISS. There were 12 male mice in this study, and some of them experienced microgravity for the duration, while others were kept in artificial gravity. When they returned to Earth, researchers used the mice sperm to artificially inseminate female mice that had never been to space. All of the offspring were healthy.

Radiation on the ISS is about 100 times stronger than on Earth. But not only did the offspring display no negative effects from having one parent spend time in that radiation environment, the male reproductive organs appeared undamaged as well.

We conclude that short-term stays inouter spacedo not cause overt defects in the physiological function of male reproductive organs, sperm function, and offspring viability, says the study published Tuesday in the journalScientific Reports. The study is titled Male mice, caged in the International Space Station for 35 days, sire healthy offspring.

The male mice were examined thoroughly, down to the molecular level, to determine what, if any, damage they received while in space. The scientists examined the testes, the epididymides, and the accessory glands once the mice were returned to Earth. Both the artificial gravity (AG) and the microgravity (MG) mice showed decreased accessory gland weight, but there was no change in gene expression.

The study also found that the sperm from both the AG and MG males fertilized female eggs in vitro at about the same rate as ground control (GC) males. When those pups were born, there was no difference between the pups from AG, MG, and GC sperm. Also, all of the pups experienced similar growth rates after they were born.

The researchers concluded that mouse sperm from males who spent a short amount of time in space experienced no ill effects.

This research adds to previous Japanese research from 2017 that saw freeze-dried mouse sperm spend nine months in space. While that sperm showed some radiation damage, that damage didnt seem to affect the pups born from it. In fact, those mice went on to breed more mice which also showed no damage.

Thereve been other experiments on mice reproduction in space and after exposure to space. But in some of those experiments, large numbers of the mice died due to what the authors call payload-related issues. For this reason, the authors designed and built special habitat systems for their study, ensuring that the mice survived the mission. The habitats also allowed the researchers to simulate microgravity for one of the groups of mice.

While human reproduction hasnt been studied in-depth, there is some data. Male astronauts have been able to impregnate their spouses almost immediately after returning from space. And though many female astronauts are nearing the end of their biological limits for producing offspring by the time they become astronauts, a 2005 study showed that female astronauts gave birth to 17 babies after returning from space. There was a high miscarriage rate for female astronauts, but thats probably related to their ages.

Scientists have been studying the effects of space on reproduction in anticipation of greater numbers of people spending time in space. So far theyve conducted studies into birds, sea urchins, fish, newts, frogs, rats, and mice. Those studies have produced different results, including male and female rats who went into space together and failed to reproduce, or even mate.

The era where people can easily go into space is coming, the study says. Studies of the effects of space environment on the reproductive system are necessary to prevent undesirable effects in the next generation.

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NASA leader vows to seek answers about space station from Russia – Houston Chronicle

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine vowed Thursday to speak to the head of the Russian space agency after reports that the cause of a hole found on the International Space Station last year would be kept secret.

But he was careful to point out that he doesn't want this situation to destroy the country's relationship with Russia, a partner in space since 1975.

"They have not told me anything," Bridenstine told the Houston Chronicle during a question and answer session at a Houston energy conference. "I don't want to let one item set (the relationship) back, but it is clearly not acceptable that there are holes in the International Space Station."

A hole that was allowing air to escape was discovered Aug. 30 in a Russian Soyuz spacecraft attached to the station. The crew was able to plug the hole quickly without any adverse effects on board. But if left unchecked, the leak could have resulted in total air loss for the station in 18 days.

Initial reports indicated that it was the result of space debris, but it was later determined that it likely was the result of sloppy drill work, either here or in space. A Russian suggestion of American sabotage did not sit well with NASA personnel and astronauts.

Dmitry Rogozin, head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, said Wednesday the country had finally determined what caused the hole. But Russia wasn't going to tell anyone, he said.

"What happened is clear to us, but we won't tell you anything," Rogozin said, according to the state-run news agency RIA Novosti.

The hole -- and its now secret cause -- is especially problematic because the Soyuz has been the only way to ferry astronauts to and from the station since 2011, when the space shuttle program was shuttered. NASA pays Russia $82 million per seat for a ride on the Soyuz.

Bridenstine told the Chronicle that the hole could have been caused by a defect before it launched, or potentially a result of something after it was on orbit. Only Russia knows for sure.

The incident highlights the need for SpaceX and Boeing to launch their commercial crew vehicles, which they have been working on since 2014 to take astronauts to and from the space station.

But both companies failed to meet their launch deadlines in 2018 and have continued to struggle. It's not clear when they will do their first test flights with astronauts on board.

Alex Stuckey writes about NASA and science for the Houston Chronicle. You can reach her at alex.stuckey@chron.com or Twitter.com/alexdstuckey.

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NASA leader vows to seek answers about space station from Russia - Houston Chronicle

Brad Pitt Calls Space Station Astronaut to Talk ‘Ad Astra’ and Life in Space (Video) – Space.com

Today (Sept. 16), Brad Pitt, who plays an astronaut in the upcoming sci-fi film "Ad Astra," chatted with NASA astronaut Nick Hague who recently screened the film at the International Space Station about what it's really like to be in space.

Hague and Pitt spoke on a call from space to Earth about everything ranging from who controls the music on the station to NASA's Artemis Program, which is preparing to send the next man and first woman to the lunar surface. Hague and Pitt even chatted about Pitt's performance in "Ad Astra" and how it compared to George Clooney's performance in "Gravity," a space drama from 2013.

"I gotta tell you, this is a real treat real pleasure to be talking to you up there," Pitt said, greeting Hague. "Likewise, a treat for us, actually. We got a chance to sneak preview the movie a few weeks back," Hague replied. "Just wanted to start off by saying thank you for what you're doing to contribute to the mission of awareness and to light that fire in the imaginations in the next generation of explorers," he added.

Watch:See a Sneak Peek of 'Ad Astra' Moon Action!Video:Haunting 'Ad Astra' Score from Dev Hynes of Blood Orange (Exclusive)

Brad Pitt asks NASA astronaut Nick Hague questions about what it's really like to live in space.

(Image credit: NASA/YouTube)

"Now that I have you all the way up at the space station, let's talk about me," Pitt said, jokingly. "How did we do? How was our zero g?" he asked Hague about his work in "Ad Astra."

"I gotta tell you, it was really good," Hague said. But, he added, it's probably "easier for me to enjoy the zero g than it was you, whether it was CGI [computer-generated imagery] or hooked to strings."

On the topic of weightlessness aboard the space station, Pitt asked Hague how he felt in the strange environment. "I was curious," Pitt said, "what are the repercussions on your body in zero g? First of all, would it be morning for you there, would it be night for you there? How do you gauge your waking hours if you see 16 sunrises and sunsets a day?"

Hague explained how the International Space Station operates on Greenwich Mean Time and how scientists have devised a number of specialized ways to try to manage the astronauts' circadian rhythms. These methods include a set workday schedule and the use of different hued lights aboard the space station.

Pitt and Hague continued to chat, discussing India's recent Chandrayaan-2 lunar landing attempt and Hague's Expedition 60 mission to the space station, which is coming to a close in October.

"Growing up on a farm, I never would've thought that I would've been able to be involved with things like that," Hague said to Pitt, about the experiments he has worked on during his time at the space station.

"It really is extraordinary by the way, you're from Kansas? I'm from Missouri. So we're neighbors!" Pitt said.

The dialogue shifted to a slightly more serious tone as Pitt asked about the hardships associated with life in space, "What is that like on the psyche? I'm sure you're always busy, but at the same time missing family and loved ones at home. How do you keep your mental state at peace?"

Hague described the difficulties that come with being away from friends and family on the station, but that because they are positioned in low Earth orbit, they at least are able to stay in contact through phone calls and regular video chats. Still, it remains a challenge that will become only more difficult with crewed missions to the moon and Mars, he said.

"To me it sounds harrowing and really challenging," Pitt said.

The tone lightened as Pitt asked, "OK, most important question: Who controls the jam box?" Hague laughed, and described how nice it was to have an international selection of music rotating on the station.

"Yes, but every now and then I'm sure someone's going, 'I wish Nick wouldn't play that country western anymore,'" Pitt joked. Laughing, Hague responded, "There's that, and to have me stop telling my bad dad jokes."

Pitt went on to say how the "Ad Astra" team originally considered having elements of 3D printing in the movie and show how future lunar settlements might realistically make tools and objects. Hague confirmed that they have been experimenting with 3D printing aboard the station for a while, even 3D printing biological tissues!

Before signing off, Pitt said, "Nick, last question, and I need to call on your expertise. Who was more believable, Clooney or Pitt?" The question was in reference to Pitt's performance in "Ad Astra" versus Clooney's performance in "Gravity." The question elicited audible laughter from both Hague and the NASA ground team coordinating the call.

"You were, absolutely," Hague said.

Hague and the rest of the Expedition 60 crew recently watched "Ad Astra" during their downtime on the space station. The movie follows Pitt's journey across the solar system to find his missing father (played by Tommy Lee Jones), who might pose a critical threat to humanity. While the movie is much more fiction than science, it does incorporate some NASA imagery, and the agency provided some technical guidance.

"We reviewed a script of Ad Astra early in production," Bert Ulrich, NASA's liaison for film and TV collaborations at NASA Headquarters, said in a statement. "Although there was no NASA storyline, we provided some of the exciting images and footage for the film especially of the Moon and Mars. Sci-fi films like Ad Astra, the Martian, Interstellar, and Gravity take movie audiences out of this world incorporating some of NASA"s most inspirational photography and footage."

In addition to Pitt, "Ad Astra" stars Liv Tyler, Donald Sutherland and Ruth Negga. The film will be released to the public on Sept. 20.

Follow Chelsea Gohd on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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NASA CubeSat will test lunar space station orbit – Astronomy Magazine

CAPSTONE offers a lot in a small package, said Bradley Cheetham, the CEO of Advance Space, in a press release.

Along with configuring the orbital path, the CubeSat will test new navigation technologies, which will allow future missions to find their location without having to rely on tracking from Earth. CAPSTONE will also help the team answer how small dedicated launches to the Moon will work, once there are astronauts on Gateway.

CAPSTONE is only about the size of a small microwave. To reach its target orbit, itll take about three months. From there, it will begin a six-month demonstration phase. During this time, the team will understand how the CubeSat will operate in the orbit.

Gateway will be a NASA-built spacecraft that will serve almost as a travelers outpost, orbiting the Moon. The space agency hopes to have astronauts living on the small space station for up to three months, giving them a place to conduct experiments and travel to the lunar surface in a short amount of time. This will also serve as a checkpoint for astronauts, their first stop from Earth to the Moon. As they make their way toward the lunar surface, theyll have to stop at Gateway first.

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NASA CubeSat will test lunar space station orbit - Astronomy Magazine

Von Braun Space Station Could Be First Hotel in Space – NowThis

Von Braun Space Station Could Be First Hotel in Space

Von Braun Space Station could be the first hotel in space, and it might offer low-gravity basketball and trampolining.

The station is slated to be operational in 2025 for intrepid travelers looking for vacation in Earths orbit. The space stations senior design architect Tim Alatorre described the concept as a space-based cruise in an interview with architectural and design publication Dezeen.

It is designed as a giant wheel that rotates to simulate gravity. Alatorre said this would allow space tourists to go about their daily routines, like using the toilet, showering, and eating. The wheel will be outfitted with 24 modules where guests can sleep.

Alatorre says the Von Braun will have restaurants, bars, concerts, movie screenings, educational seminars, and sports.

Were imagining supersized basketball events where youre running up and down walls, he told NBC News.

The space station will seek to accommodate approximately 400 people including crewmembers. But the trip wont be cheap.

Our goal is to get costs down to where you have a choice: You could save up and go for a weeks vacation in Europe, or you could go to space, Alatorre explained.

Orion Span, a competing space tourism startup, says it hopes to host guests in its space hotel, Aurora Station, in 2022.

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This Inflatable Space Habitat Could House the Next Astronauts to Walk on the Moon – Observer

Designed to be an independent space station, Bigelow Aerospaces B330 will have its own life-support and propulsion systems, capable of supporting a crew of four indefinitely and could work just about anywhere. Bigelow Aerospace

Fifty years ago, humanity achieved one of its greatest accomplishments: landing on the moon. But before NASAs astronauts stepped on the lunar surface, they had to travel through space in rickety metal cans. Space travelers of the future, however, may instead cruise in cushy inflatable pads.

Decades later, NASA is in a race against itself to send humans back to the surface of the moon by 2024. To meet this ambitious goal, the space agency plans to build what it calls a Lunar Gatewaybasically a mini space station in lunar orbit. This critical piece of hardware is essential to the agencys plans and will serve as a transportation depot; astronauts will board a lander that will descend from there to the moons surface and return to the Gateway when the astronauts are ready to come home.

SEE ALSO: Rocket Insurance Is a Complicated Branch of the Space Industry

It would be comprised of two parts: a docking port where astronauts can transfer from their spacecraft to a lander, and a power module to keep everything running. Since it will be bare bones architecture, NASA is counting on commercial partners to build the other necessary components, like landers and habitat modules.

Although the configuration is not final, this infographic shows the current lineup of parts comprising NASAs Gateway. Modules shown in blue are U.S. contributions; modules shown in purple are proposed international components; and modules in yellow are both U.S. and international, or yet to be determined. NASA

The agency plans to attach those astronaut quarters to the floating station, providing a place where astronauts can work, relax, eat and sleep. To that end, NASA is holding a competitiondubbed the Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships (NextSTEP) programto see which of its commercial partners can build the best habitat.

One such company, Bigelow Aerospace, is taking a slightly different approach to its space abodes. Based in Las Vegas, Nevada, the company thinks expandable habitat modules are the way to go. In contrast to the rigid habs of the past, Bigelows modules would launch in the cargo hold of a rocket, and then expand to full size once on orbit.

Bigelows flagship modulethe B330is essentially a giant, industrial-strength bouncy house in space. Designed to hitch a ride into space compacted, once its free of Earths atmosphere, the B330 will expand outward, creating a cushy crib for visiting astronauts.

For launch, the B330 will be compressed enough to fit inside a 16.5-foot-wide (5 meter) payload fairing; after it reaches space, the module will be inflated using its onboard gas canisters. Bigelow Aerospace

The modules expandable nature is its chief selling point; constructed out of a durable kevlar material, this type of habitat offers many advantages over the bulky, metallic modules carried up by the space shuttle. Not only is it cheaper to launch, but since its bigger on the inside than previous designs, its basically the TARDIS of space habs. For launch, the B330 will be compressed enough to fit inside a 16.5-foot-wide (5 meter) payload fairing; after it reaches space, the module will be inflated using its onboard gas canisters.

According to company representatives, this feature enables B330 to provide more habitable volume than traditional aluminum modules. For comparison, the module boasts 330 cubic meters (11,650 cubic feet) of internal volume, while the International Space Station contains about 930 cubic meters (32,840 cubic feet).

Designed to be an independent space station, B330 will have its own life-support and propulsion systems, capable of supporting a crew of four indefinitely and could work just about anywherein orbit or in deep space.

The B330 is the follow-up to the companys initial prototype, dubbed the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (AKA the BEAM), which was installed on the space station in 2015. The demonstration proved that the materials used to build the BEAM could withstand the harsh environment of outer space. Bigelow hopes that NASA will ultimately select the B330 for use on the upcoming Lunar Gateway. NASA plans to begin construction on the Gateway as soon as 2022 as part of its Artemis program, which aims to put astronauts on the moon by 2024 and establish a sustainable, long-term presence on and around the moon by 2028.

BEAM, the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, is pictured installed on the Tranquility module of the ISS and expanded to its full-size volume. NASA

NASA envisions this Gateway, and the proposed lunar exploration program it will support, to be a stepping stone to Mars. So the Lunar Gateway could be just the beginning for Bigelow and the B330. But before it can become the free-floating deep-space hab of the future, B330 needs to pass NASAs tests.

The space agency is currently conducting a two-week-long ground test on the B330 habitat at the companys Las Vegas headquarters. Several NASA astronauts are participating in the testing to give input and assess the module. After all, who better to review a space habitat than someone who has actually been to space?

The B330s cavernous interior provides space for workstations, cooking areas, 3D printers, plant growth facilities and more that needs to be in a fixed location. It also features multiple hand and foot rails, which are necessary features used by astronauts to get around sans gravity. But all of that needs to be laid out just so. Heres where the astronauts come in: Theyve been giving feedback on various things like hand and foothold placement and how the interior flows.

NASA astronauts participating in the B330 ground test pose next to the inflation tanks inside the Bigelow testing unit. Bigelow Aerospace

If things go well for Bigelow, and NASA green-lights the habitat, company officials say that a B330 could be ready to ship in as little as 42 months.

But the versatile hab is capable of more than the Gateway; it can go anywhere, including the lunar surfaceand Mars, as well as free-floating in deep space. Two B330s could also connect, forming a spacious Martian transport system. But testing it in lunar orbit is the crucial first step toward any deep space ambitions.

The habitat could also stay close to home, thanks to a change in NASA policy. Earlier this year, the space agency announced it was opening up the International Space Station (ISS) for commercial use. According to the announcement, private companies will be able to send private citizensAKA space touristson the trip of a lifetime as part of an initiative to help generate a sustainable economy in low-Earth orbit. The opportunities would begin in 2020 and will come with some strict guidelines.

This is a look inside the central core of the B330, which is one of the main translation passages inside the space station. Bigelow Aerospace

Designed to help stimulate an economy in space, the new endeavor will also enable companies to develop and demonstrate technologies that will help NASA to achieve its goal of reaching the moon.

In addition to sending private citizens to the space station, the agency is also hoping that some companies may want to build their own modules that would attach to the station. Bigelow proposed attaching a B330 to the ISS, similar to what the company did with its BEAM module.

In this rendering, a B330 is seen on the forward node of the International Space Station. Bigelow Aerospace

In June, Bigelow even announced that it had bought seats on four launches of SpaceXs Crew Dragon capsule, a new vehicle that will soon be able to transport people to low-Earth orbit. The plans were to sell tickets to tourists for $52 million each; however, those plans have been put on indefinite hold.

Thats because sending tourists to the ISS is way more complicated than anyone realizednot to mention, its incredibly difficult to find people who can shell out more than $50 million for a short sojourn in space.

For now, though, the company is focusing on making it to lunar orbit. If Bigelow can snag that coveted contract, perhaps it can keep its dream of an even more massive deep space habitat alive.

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This Inflatable Space Habitat Could House the Next Astronauts to Walk on the Moon - Observer

Russia and China Are Teaming Up to Explore the Moon – Space.com

The first country to land a spacecraft on the moon and the only country to do so since the 1970s are teaming up for a lunar return.

In 1966, the Soviet Union made the first soft lunar landing during the Luna 9 mission, which sent the first images from the surface of the moon back to Earth. The country spent a decade exploring the lunar surface but hasn't been back since 1976.

Now, Russia is partnering with modern lunar powerhouse China, the only country to successfully land softly on the moon within the past decade or four. In January, as part of China's current moon mission, the country's Chang'e 4 lander and Yutu 2 rover became the first robots to operate on the far side of the moon.

Related: Chang'e 4 in Pictures: China's Mission to the Moon's Far Side

China has sketched out an ambitious lunar plan, with four future missions under discussion.

Chang'e 5 will launch in the next year and is designed to be China's first sample-return mission. Chang'e 6 will fetch a sample from the lunar south pole in 2023, and Chang'e 7 will explore that region in detail. Another mission will begin progress on China's long-term goal of establishing a science base on the moon.

Russia's lunar plans are running on a different schedule to account for the country's long hiatus in moon visits. The head of the Roscosmos space agency, Dmitry Rogozin, recently walked through those plans, citing a 2024 orbiter, a 2028 sample-return mission, and human flights in 2029 or 2030.

And on Sept. 17, Rogozin and his Chinese counterpart, Zhang Kejian, agreed to work together on lunar projects, according to a statement from Roscosmos. They plan to build a shared data center, with one outpost in each country, for lunar and deep-space research.

Luna 9 the first successful lunar lander, which the Soviet Union launched in 1966 snapped this image of the lunar surface.

(Image credit: NASA National Space Science Data Center)

They also agreed that China's Chang'e 7 lander and a Russian orbiter called Luna 26 should work together, with Luna 26 helping Chang'e 7 find a safe landing site. Each spacecraft may also carry scientific instruments from the other country, assuming scientific analysis proves that would be beneficial.

So far, China has a flawless record at the moon, beginning with its 2007 mission, Chang'e 1. Russia, on the other hand, has struggled recently with hiccups in its human spaceflight program, the only way astronauts can currently reach the International Space Station.

Last fall, a small-but-much-publicized hole in a docked Soyuz capsule prompted continuing speculation, and a rocket anomaly during a crew launch sent two astronauts plummeting back to Earth. Last month, the first-ever uncrewed Soyuz capsule struggled to dock autonomously at the station.

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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Russia and China Are Teaming Up to Explore the Moon - Space.com

First hotel in space set to open in 2025 with cruise ship amenities and out-of-this-world views – FOX 13 News, Tampa Bay

The Von Braun Station will feature 24 modules with a different dedicated function, the company said. In addition to the hotel, it will also hold research facilities, restaurants and bars. (Photo credit: The Gateway Foundation) The Von Braun Station will feature 24 modules with a different dedicated function, the company said. In addition to the hotel, it will also hold research facilities, restaurants and bars. (Photo credit: The Gateway Foundation)

ALTA LOMA, Calif. - Much like taking the family on a cruise or a trip to visit Mickey Mouse at Disney World, one California company believes that going to space will eventually become just another vacation option.

Design plans for the Von Braun Station, the first-ever hotel in space, have been revealed by the Gateway Foundation. Set to have the first 100 people on board by 2025 and be fully complete by 2027, the company said the Von Braun Station is designed to give tourists "the feel of home" with luxury suites, recreation halls, restaurants and bars while simultaneously floating in space with an out-of-this-world view.

It will also hold research facilities for governments, scientists and commercial interests, the foundation said.

"As a species we have had a transient and limited presence in space by a small number of specialists for over 58 years," Senior Design Architect Tim Alatorre told the architecture and design magazine Dezeen. "We want to change that and open up space to anyone who wishes to work or live in space."

When compared to the Stanley Kubrick movie "2001: A Space Odyssey," Altorre said the atmosphere of the station station hotel will be warmer with fabrics, lighting, paints and materials with texture to "help us to connect and feel at home."

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Some of the planned for activities at the luxury hotel in space could include low-gravity basketball, trampolining and rock climbing. Because the majority of the station will initially have about a sixth of Earth's gravity and other parts with near zero gravity, there's also potential for playing fictional games like Quidditch from the Harry Potter series and the battle games from the Ender's Game series, Altorre told Dezeen.

"There will also be many of the things you see on cruise ships: restaurants, bars, musical concerts, movie screenings, and educational seminars," Alatorre told Dezeen. "Eventually, we plan on offering excursions in true space ships (not designed to return to Earth) out to other stations or the moon."

Alatorre said astronaut Scott Kelly's recent stay on the International Space Station for nearly a year made clear that "long term habitation of space in microgravity is not sustainable." The senior design architect said the main objective for the Von Braun Station is to be the first space station to have artificial gravity, allowing a permanent culture of people living and working in Earth's orbit.

The station is planned to have a total population of 350 to 450 people, including more than 100 crew.

When it comes to the logistics of holding hundreds of people, Altorre told Dezeen that the majority of food will be served in one of the two restaurants on the station "with all of the dishes you would expect on a luxury cruise ship or in a major hotel."

With artificial gravity, the restroom facilities will function "almost identically" to how they are on Earth, Altorre said. Drinking water will be brought from Earth, and showers and toilets will use recycled water.

Alatorre told Dezeen that much of the technology and overall architecture of the Von Braun Station was "heavily influenced" by the International Space Station, but varies on the way it will be constructed. While the ISS was assembled in orbit using the labor of astronauts performing space walks, this station will primarily be constructed in space by automated and semi-autonomous systems.

The space hotel design was named after Dr. Wernher von Braun, a rocket scientist and space architect who popularized the rotating space station concept first in Germany and later in the United States. Members of the Gateway Foundation "overwhelmingly" voted for the name earlier this year.

This story was reported from Cincinnati.

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First hotel in space set to open in 2025 with cruise ship amenities and out-of-this-world views - FOX 13 News, Tampa Bay

Designs revealed for incredible new space hotel – CNN

(CNN) It's 50 years since man first stepped on the moon, and we're still harboring dreams of escaping life on Earth for the mysteries of space.

If a career as an astronaut isn't for you, perhaps the promise of a sojourn in a space hotel might be appealing.

Among the stars

According to digitally rendered video and images released by the Gateway Foundation, the station resembles a rotating wheel, comprised of 24 modules, orbiting the Earth.

But how would the physics of the hotel work?

Tim Alatorre, senior design architect at the Gateway Foundation, says the rotating wheel would create a simulated gravity.

Near the center of the station there's no artificial gravity, Alatorre says, but as you move down the outside of the station, the feeling of gravity increases.

A close-up of the modules.

Courtesy Gateway Foundation

The Gateway Foundation's hotel design is named for Wernher von Braun, an aerospace engineer who pioneered rocket technology, first in Germany and later in the United States.

This could be viewed as a controversial move. While living in Germany, von Braun was involved in the Nazi rocket development program. He later worked on the Apollo space program in the United States.

The name was voted for by the Gateway Foundation members because the station is based on designs von Braun sketched out some 60 years ago.

"The basic physics of the station haven't changed since the 1950s, the way the station rotates," says Alatorre.

The main difference is the modern materials -- new metal alloys, carbon composites, 3D printing and launch pad technology that, says Alatorre, make a space hotel more probable in our current era.

What the space hotel might look like inside.

Courtesy Gateway Foundation

Space tourism is an expensive game -- Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic plans to launch passengers into sub-orbital space at the hefty sum of $250,000 per person, per trip.

Meanwhile, Aurora Station says a stay in its space hotel will cost an eyewatering $9.5 million.

Price wise, in the early phases the Von Braun hotel will also be catering to those with dollars to spend, but the foundation is hoping to make it equivalent to "a trip on a cruise or a trip to Disneyland."

Aurora Station aims to sleep just 12, whereas the Von Braun Station will sleep 352 people with a maximum capacity of 450.

Warm aesthetic

The Von Braun Station is going for an Earth-bound aesthetic.

Courtesy Gateway Foundation

So what will Von Braun Station be like inside?

Alatorre says the hotel's aesthetic was a direct response to the Stanley Kubrick movie "2001: A Space Odyssey" -- just maybe not in the way you might think.

"It was almost a blueprint of what not to do," says Alatorre. "I think the goal of Stanley Kubrick was to highlight the divide between technology and humanity and so, purposefully, he made the stations and the ships very sterile and clean and alien."

It's supposed to be the opposite of the Stanley Kubrick movie "2001: A Space Odyssey"

Courtesy Gateway Foundation

Instead, Alatorre wanted to bring a slice of earth to space, to avoid a laboratorial, overly Star Trek-esque feel.

On board, there'll be warm suites with carpets and stylish monochrome touches and chic bars that wouldn't look out of place back on Earth, just with star-gazing views.

There will also be plenty of fun recreational activities for guest to enjoy, says Alatorre.

"We're going to have a number of different recreation activities and games that'll highlight the fact that you're able to do things that you can't do on Earth," he says. "Because of the weightlessness and the reduced gravity, you'll be able to jump higher, be able to lift things, be able to run in ways that you can't on Earth."

A sport that's intriguingly called "supersize basketball" is one such concept, according to Alatorre.

'Starship culture'

The Von Braun station hopes to launch in 2025.

Courtesy Gateway Foundation

If it all sounds like a space-age gimmick, Alatorre is emphatic that the concept will have widespread, enduring appeal.

"People will want to go and experience this just because it's a cool new thing and they've never done it before," he admits.

"But our goal -- the overall goal of the Gateway Foundation -- is to create a starship culture where people are going to space, and living in space, and working in space and they want to be in space. And we believe that there's a demand for that."

That means having space be a place where thousands of people are "living, working and thriving."

The Gateway Foundation also intends the space station to be used for research purposes, as well as asteroid mining.

Alatorre says the Von Braun hotel wants to be "the first in orbit," but that even if the Gateway Foundation doesn't launch by 2025, the company knows one of its competitors will.

Space tourism is the future, he says, and the Gateway Foundation believe that future's imminent.

Sustainability in space

The hotel is pitching itself as sustainable.

Courtesy Gateway Foundation

Given the design is still exactly that -- just a design -- there are some questions that remain unanswered about how the space hotel will function in actuality.

For example, it's been suggested that living in low gravity for an extended period of time is damaging to the human body. While vacationers will probably only visit the hotel for a few weeks, staff will plan to be there for six months to a year.

They'll adjust schedules as needed, says Alatorre, but right now, the foundation thinks this proposition would be "perfectly safe."

There's also the sustainability question, as people look for more eco-friendly vacations, surely going to space is not the solution?

Alatorre points to SpaceX's Raptor engine, which uses methane instead of petroleum-based fuel, suggesting "eco-friendly" rocket designs are the future.

He says recycling will be woven into the fabric of the space hotel.

"On the station itself, it's going to be about the most environmentally friendly vacation you'll ever have. Because we're recycling everything," says Alatorre.

"There's no amount of water or trash or waste that is going to be discarded, everything will be recycled, reused, stored, converted to some other form."

Terrestrial construction on the Gateway Foundation's project is set to begin October 1, 2019.

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Designs revealed for incredible new space hotel - CNN

First space hotel set to open in 2025 with cruise ship, Disney World amenities – WSB Atlanta

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First space hotel set to open in 2025 with cruise ship, Disney World amenities

The first hotel in orbit above the Earth is set to open in just over six years, according to the ambitious plans of the company anticipating the worlds first space tourists.

>> Read more trending news

The Gateway Foundation unveiled its designs for a rotating space station that will produce differing levels of artificial gravity and will accommodate up to 100 tourists a week when it opens in 2025, according to news reports.

Named the Von Braun Station after rocket technology pioneer Wernher von Braun, Gateway said on its website that its working with national space agencies to research low gravity while assembling the station and also providing space tourists who want to experience life on a large space station with the comfort of low gravity and the feel of a nice hotel.

Using technology for the construction of the International Space Station, the Von Braun station will consist of two concentric structural rings connected together by spokes that will support a so-called Habitation Ring of large, pressurized modules, Gateway officials said.

The foundation said the station will include an array of modules, including an air water power module, a gym module, a kitchen, restaurant and bar module. There will also be a crew quarters; privately owned modules for villas, hotels and commercial uses and government-owned modules for research and training.

Initial activities for tourists might include low-gravity basketball, low-gravity rock climbing and trampolining, Von Braun Station design architect Tim Alatorre said, according to ABC News, which sited the architecture and design magazine Dezeen.

Alatorre predicted travel to the station would compare with a cruise or a Disney World vacation with activities like concerts, movies and seminars.

Others are getting in on the race to commercialize space, including NASA, which announced this summer it expected to open the International Space Station to tourists by 2020.

2019 Cox Media Group.

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First space hotel set to open in 2025 with cruise ship, Disney World amenities - WSB Atlanta

First Trailer for Space Station Survival Thriller ‘3022’ with Omar Epps – First Showing

by Alex BillingtonSeptember 18, 2019Source: YouTube

"We're all that's left!" An official trailer has arrived for an intriguing indie sci-fi film titled 3022, the latest from producer / director John Suits (The Scribbler, Pandemic). It's hard to tell if that title refers to the year, or something else. The film is about a crew of four astronauts stuck on a dying space station after Earth experiences a cataclysmic event. They watch this happen, then spend the rest of the time trying to figure out what to do and how to survive. Starring Omar Epps, with Kate Walsh, Miranda Cosgrove, Jorja Fox, Angus Macfadyen, and Audrey Looye. This really doesn't look too bad. Way too many lens flares being used, but otherwise seems like a much better take on the concept from The Cloverfield Project about people trapped in space when Earth suddenly goes bye bye. I really hope it's better! Check out the first look below.

Here's the first official trailer for John Suits' 3022, found directly on YouTube:

After Earth suffers a cataclysmic extinction-level event, four astronauts now marooned on a dying space station must embark on a desperate fight for survival amidst the mind-shattering horror of what it means to be the last humans alive. 3022, also known as Correction, is directed by American filmmaker / producer John Suits, director of the movies Breathing Room, 2nd Take, The Scribbler, and Pandemic previously; producer of many other indie features. The screenplay is written by Ryan Binaco. This hasn't premiered at any festivals or elsewhere, as far as we know. 3022 will be released later this year - stay tuned for more info.

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First Trailer for Space Station Survival Thriller '3022' with Omar Epps - First Showing

Brad Pitt to Speak with NASA Astronaut on Space Station about Artemis Program – PRNewswire

WASHINGTON, Sept. 15, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- As NASA prepares to send the first woman and next man to the Moon by 2024 under theArtemis program, Brad Pitt is playing an astronaut in his latest film. Now the actor will have the opportunity to discuss what it's truly like to live and work in space with a NASA crew member living aboard the International Space Station.

Pitt's Earth-to-space call will air live at 11:35 a.m. EDT Monday, Sept. 16 on NASA Television and the agency'swebsite.

NASA astronautNick Haguewill answer questions from the actor. For nearly 20 years, astronauts have continuously lived and work on the International Space Station, testing technologies, performing science and developing the skills needed to explore farther from Earth.

InAd Astra, which Hague and his Expedition 60crewmates recently watched during their downtime aboard the orbiting laboratory, Pitt travels across the solar system, including to theMoon and Mars. Without providing spoilers, the parallels between the movie and the current state of human spaceflight stop there, making the film more science fiction than reality.However, the agency did provide visuals for the film and some technical expertise.

"We reviewed a script of Ad Astra early in production," said Bert Ulrich, the agency's liaison for film and TV collaborations at NASA Headquarters in Washington."Although there was no NASA storyline, we provided some of the exciting images and footage for the film especially of the Moon and Mars.Sci-fi films like Ad Astra, the Martian, Interstellar, and Gravity take movie audiences out of this world incorporating some of NASA's most inspirational photography and footage."

Inspiring the next generation of explorers the Artemis Generation ensures America will continue to lead in space exploration and discovery. Additional information about working with the agency on a feature or fictional film is available online under theMedia Usage Guidelines.

The agency is planning to return astronauts to the Moon in the next five years with commercial and international partners. First, NASAwill send a suite of new science instruments and technology demonstrations to the Moon oncommercial landers.

Following the 2024 crew landing, NASA will send astronauts to the Moon about once per year thereafter and establish sustainable lunar exploration by 2028. After gaining experience at the Moon testing new systems, such as NASA's Space Launch System rocket, Orionspacecraft,Gateway,andhuman landers, NASA will take humanity's next giant leap, sending astronauts to Mars.

Follow America's Moon to Mars exploration at:

https://www.nasa.gov/topics/moon-to-mars

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Brad Pitt to Speak with NASA Astronaut on Space Station about Artemis Program - PRNewswire

Fox’s ‘Ad Astra’ Bets on More Than Just Space Spectacle to Draw Moviegoers – Hollywood Reporter

Brad Pitt, very much in the public eye after a well-received performance in Once Upon a Time In Hollywood, is back in theaters on Sept. 20 with Ad Astra. Directed by James Gray, the movie has Pitt starring as astronaut Roy McBride. When mysterious events begin occurring around the world and the safety of the planet at stake, McBride is called upon to travel to deep space to investigate. The reason hes selected is that these events may be tied to his father Clifford, an astronaut himself who disappeared decades ago but who, it turns out, may still be alive.

The movie is one of the titles inherited by Disney when it acquired Fox earlier this year. Other Fox holdovers such as Dark Phoenix and Stuber have disappointed at the box office, and with a mid-teen millions opening weekend forecast by tracking estimates the movie would have a long way toward breaking out as a hit. However,Ad Astrais being positioned as awards contender, with an 82 percent "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on positive early festival reviews backing that up.

To sell the movie not based on any existing property or material the studio has run a campaign focused on the emotional drama of Pitts McBride and how he deals with his personal issues while also trying to save the world.

The Posters

An astronaut presumably Roy is floating in mid-space on the first poster (by marketing agency WORKS ADV), his body fuzzy as if its being distorted or pulled apart in some manner. The mysterious nature of the story is communicated through the copy The answers we seek are just outside our reach. Later that month the second poster came out that showed Roy looking out from his helmet. The third poster, released in July, shows Pitts face more clearly as he stands in what seems to be a space station. The same copy from the first two posters is used again here.

A silhouette of Pitt is seen on the IMAX poster, the sun shining over one shoulder and a field of stars shown within the outline of his body. Floating there is the same fuzzy astronaut seen on the first poster, this time seen to be hurtling toward Earth without the benefit of a ship or other protection other than his suit. On the Dolby Cinemas poster the focus is more on perspective, the shadow of an astronaut and his space station seen as small and seemingly insignificant against the massive fiery glow of the sun in the background.

The Trailers

The first trailer (5.3 million views on YouTube) finally debuted in early June after months of anticipation. It immediately establishes that Roy is driven to be the best astronaut he can because hes following in his fathers heroic footsteps. An incident on a mission lands Roy in the hospital and it turns out there were several similar ones around the world. They may be related to what appears to be the return of his father after being presumed missing in deep space decades ago. Roy is sent to find out whats happening, a mission that wont be easy or safe.

Another trailer (2.8 million views on YouTube) came out in mid-July. Some sort of crisis is facing the world and the key to resolving it involves Roy finding his long-lost father. Theres some dramatic footage shown involving space exploration along with helpful exposition from various characters. Its a tighter message than what was used in the first trailer but it still may play as a bit vague, at least for the general audience.

IMAX debuted an exclusivethird trailer(136,000 views on YouTube) in August. This one begins with Roy talking about the inspiration he draws from the example of his father. After we see him go through his evaluations, the mission is explained: He has to stop an event that could erase the entire solar system. The stakes are high, then, as Roy navigates his personal feelings and the hostile environment of space.

Advertising and Publicity

The movie was part of the studios presentation to exhibition executives at CineEurope in mid-July 2018, but mostly conversations around the movie were focused on when it would finally be done and where any sort of marketing for it was, even just months before it was scheduled for release.

As soon as the first trailer was released it was repurposed as a promoted tweet to increase the reach of the spot. Just a few days later a cut-down version of the trailer was used in an extended TV commercial that jettisons most of the familial backstory to focus on Roy being sent on a vague mission to outer space. Another commercial also featuring a 60-second runtime was more about the threat being faced while also including mention of Roys father. Shorter commercials continued to be released throughout August and September that highlighted various elements of the story, including the secrets being kept, while continuing to sell the overall spectacle of the film.

Additional commercials came from IMAX that focused on the spectacleof the film and encouraged audiences to see it in the biggest format available.

Pitt introduced a promotion for the movie in a special video that aired during Week 2 of the NFL season on Fox.

A featurette was released in late July on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, with Gray talking about the nature of space travel and how his film expands on the human tendency to look for adventure among the stars. Another featurette about a month later offered more details of the movies story, selling audiences on the epic scale of the movie.

The movies world premiere took place last month at the Venice Film Festival, with appearances by Gray and the cast. That screening generated positive reviews and awards buzz.

A clip released in early September offered an extended look at the chase action sequence involving moon rovers. A second has Roy being briefed on the details of the mission hes being sent on while a third pulls footage from early in the film to show Roy one of the storys inciting incidents. An exclusive clip of Roy investigating an abandoned ship was given to IMAX as well. There was also a promotional video that focused on how composer Dev Hynes incorporated sounds recorded from space into the films score.

Ever since the projects inception, Gray has emphasized his desire to make the space sequences in the movie as realistic as possible. That effort was communicated to the audience through two promotional partnerships:

Lockheed Martin, one of the primary companies providing NASA with the hardware used in space exploration, produced a series of featurettes with Gray talking with Lockheed Martin staff. One focused on designing the spaceship, another on designing the space station habitat and a third on conveying the realities of life in space.

NASA itself got involved, hosting a livestreamed event featuring Pitt participating in a Q&A with the crew of the International Space Station. Later on, Pitt and Gray were joined by NASA staff to talk about the film and their research during production.

Virgin Atlantic was also a promotional partner, using footage of the film showing the company to be a key provider of travel to the moon in the future in commercials.

Online ads used video snippets along with elements pulled from the key art to drive traffic to the movies official website and get people to buy tickets.

Those seeing the movie in XD at Regal Cinemas location opening weekend will receive a mini version of the second poster, while those opting for IMAX screenings at AMC Theaters will receive an exclusive pin designed to look like a NASA mission patch.

Final commercials labeled the movie as the must-see event of the year, making an explicit call via pull quotes from early reviews to see it on the big screen.

Overall

Theres an interesting dynamic formed as various appeals and messages vie for contention throughout different elements of the campaign.

The minimalist aesthetic of the posters, featuring just a single image in an attempt to convey the solitude of space and the dangers posed by the vast nothingness astronauts operate in, is countered by the clips released later on that pull out as many explosions and lunar rover chases as possible.

The intimate nature of the story conveyed in the trailers is countered by the way the movie is sometimes presented by IMAX, not Fox, and the message that it must be experienced in as immersive a manner as possible.

Through all of that, Pitts Roy McBride is shown to be a good soldier who stoically does his duty when called upon. That the mission hes tasked with also holds the promise of providing closure on a very intimate matter the disappearance of his father makes success vital on both a personal and professional level.

Fox has focused on Pitt throughout the campaign not only because of his status as one of Hollywoods biggest stars but because there isnt the built-in appeal of an existing franchise of IP to fall back on. Its hoping that audiences, at least those who arent rushing to revisit the residents and servants of Downton Abbey, will come out for the spectacle and drama and help propel the movie into awards contention.

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Fox's 'Ad Astra' Bets on More Than Just Space Spectacle to Draw Moviegoers - Hollywood Reporter

Evening with an astronaut – Point Pleasant Register

OHIO VALLEY Dr. Garrett Reisman would definitely be an interesting dinner guest for any occasion and on Tuesday evening, the public can spend some time with him at Gallia Academy High School in the gymnasium.

Starting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 24, Reisman, who was an astronaut with NASA, will be speaking on his experiences. The presentation is free and open to the public and has been arranged by the Bossard Memorial Library and the Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Center. The evening is meant to compliment the librarys current exhibit, SPACE: A Journey to Our Future. The exhibit at the library, is also free.

According to background information provided to Ohio Valley Publishing, Reisman was selected by NASA as a mission specialist Astronaut in 1998. His first mission was aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour, in 2008, which dropped him off for a 95-day mission aboard the International Space Station after which he returned to Earth aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery. His second mission was aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis, in 2010, and returned Reisman to the Space Station.

During these missions, Reisman performed three spacewalks, operated the Space Station Robot Arm and was a flight engineer aboard the Space Shuttle. After leaving NASA in 2011, Reisman joined SpaceX where he worked for Elon Musk and prepared SpaceX for human spaceflight as the Director of Space Operations. Currently he is a Professor of Astronautical Engineering at USC and a Senior Advisor at SpaceX.

Reisman spoke with Ohio Valley Publishing about his upcoming visit, explaining the structure of his presentation will focus on not only the accomplishments of the past but what the future, in terms of space exploration, holds. He said he was humbled to travel to Ohio to speak, given some of the states famous residents involved in the space program over the years. Reisman will also share some of his experiences in becoming an astronaut and how determination and hard work can pay off for anyone with a dream.

Prior to his Tuesday evening talk which is open to the public, Reisman will be addressing area students earlier in the day, including students at River Valley Middle School joined by students from South Gallia Middle School and Gallia Academy Middle School along with students from Ohio Valley Christian School. The students will be largely made up of those in sixth-eighth grades. These sessions earlier in the day are closed to the public.

Reisman said he will share his own experiences with students in regards to achieving his dream and overcoming obstacles.

It is true, there is a disparity in resources and opportunities availablenot everyone in this country has the same advantages and Im very aware of this as a father, he said. I grew up in New Jersey, went to public schools.my message to all kids out there is dont buy into that (negative) narrative. If you really apply yourself and are really passionate about getting involved in something like space, you can do itI didnt go to a fancy prep schoolmy parents werent billionaires, but I was fascinated with everything about space and read every book I could get my hands on. I wasnt going to let anything stop me. If something is really important to you and people tell you its impossible, or you grow up with everyone telling you, you cant do thator thats not something people from around her do, dont listen to that. If its important to you, just do it, dont allow yourself to be taken down by depressing peopledont let them win.

Addressing how to achieve what some see as the impossible, Reisman explained, People told me things I wanted to do were impossible, that they were never going to happen. Doesnt mean it wasnt hard, I had to work really hard and sometimes I was at a disadvantage not being the tallest person (for space walks) or not having attended a fancy prep schoolhard work can overcome those disadvantages. If its important to you, you can do it.

Reisman explained many people told his boss Elon Musk, the things he wanted to achieve were impossible but he went out and did it.

Resiman added the impossible is possible by being willing to work and willing to fail.

Failure is OK, thats another message I really want to sendElon would say, if youre not failing youre not trying. I failed so many times along my pathyouve got to be OK with that.

Though the numbers have grown over the decades, to say you have been in space is to be part of a select club with experiences most human beings havent had. Reisman said his most memorable experiences in space were his three space walks. He called them mind blowing and incredible and not something easily put into words.

Its not safe, you do know that (when attempting it), doing a space walk is just as risky as reentry, he said.

Reisman said the adrenalin rush aside, there is the worry you will make a mistake and not achieve all your objectives after training for this incredibly scrutinized period of time where time is incredibly important, youre using up oxygen and resources, theres a giant team of people on the groundits not something to be taken lightly.

As stated earlier, hes now teaching full time at USC while remaining a senior advisor at SpaceX. Given this transition in careers, he was asked what is more difficult, being a teacher or an astronaut?

They both have their challengesit was a big transition for me (going from being an astronaut to teaching), he said. When teaching I dont have to worry about the pressure of (having enough) oxygen or if the propulsion system is working, he joked. It was a huge transition but Ive made a number of them over the course of my career.

Reisman talked about the panic a person can feel when taking a new career path and referred to the imposter syndrome. He said there were times he felt like an imposter when giving a lecture for the first time, putting on a flight suit or running sophisticated programs, though his training prepared him for these various paths.

Thats common (that imposter syndrome) and that will happen and be uncomfortable but eventually goes wayeventually you get good at it (this new path) and no longer feel like an imposter anymore but it takes time, he said of the hard work and persistence that follows.

Reisman is also in a select group of people who have been able to look at Earth from space and said what impressed him most about that view is how thin the atmosphere was, it looks incredibly fragile. He said it drove home for him the importance of taking care of the planet.

As for something about Reisman most people dont know, he said, I was a lousy Cub Scout, I never even make it to Boy Scouts. I failed out of Webelos.

Despite this early exposure to failure in life, Reisman took it in stride and recently found himself giving lessons to actor Brad Pitt on how to fly a fake spaceship or at least look realistic while trying. Reisman was a consultant on the new film Ad Astra, and added, Pitt caught on and did well.

Bossard Library is pleased to partner with the Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Center to provide the opportunity for the public to hear Dr. Reismans presentation, as he shares his amazing experiences in the space program, Debbie Saunders, library director, said. It is our hope that people of all ages will enjoy his presentation and that his words will spark an interest in attendees to want to learn more about NASA and all things relating to space. His presentation will perfectly compliment the Space exhibition currently on display at the Library now through January 5, 2020.

Saunders also noted, as children have experienced the exhibit, we hear comments from some of them about their career aspirations, with some of them even noting an interest in becoming aerospace engineers. If hearing from Dr. Reismans experience and/or attending the exhibition can plant the seed in all these students to follow their dreams and reach for the stars, then the goal of these types of events will be fulfilled.

Reisman said he hopes those who hear him speak leave with a better awareness of whats gong on in the recent past and near future in space exploration, but more important, I hope at least I reach some kid out there that gets inspired and the lessons I learned can help them with whatever they want to do, whether they want to be an astronaut, or doctor, or scientist, and even a dancer, whatever it might be, whatever their dreams are, just let them know dreams do come true, it is possible and they shouldnt be discouraged.

For more information on Reisman, visit http://www.GarrettReisman.com, http://www.AstronautGarrettReisman.com or follow him at @astro_g_dogg

For more information on the SPACE exhibit at the library, go to https://www.bossardlibrary.org/

Gallia Academy High School is located at 2855 Centenary Road, Gallipolis, Ohio.

Dr. Garrett Reisman, pictured, will be speaking at 7 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 24 at Gallia Academy High School. Reisman is a former astronaut with NASA and currently a Professor of Astronautical Engineering at USC and a Senior Advisor at SpaceX.

Dr. Garrett Reisman to speak at GAHS

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Evening with an astronaut - Point Pleasant Register

Chandrayaan 2: India’s Moon Mission – A Failure or Not – Forbes

Indias ambitious attempt to land on the unexplored polar south of the moon has ended in disaster. With less than two miles to a place in history, Vikram lander (named after Vikram Sarabhai, who cradled the Indian Space sciences in their infancy) landed beyond ISROs reach, a live broadcast. It was set to countdown to this new milestone, showed tensed scientists attempting to retain control, but all signals were eventually lost.

The Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, who was also present for the occasion, took the failure. With a pinch of salt, he offered encouragement to the team of scientists and children that had accompanied him to the ISRO campus.

Be courageous. Our faith in ISRO has not lost. I can proudly say that the effort was worth it and so was the journey. We are full of confidence that when it comes to our space program, the best is yet to come,he stated, lauding the ISRO.

Scientists and employees view the Chandrayaan-2 spacecraft Lander module at the Indian Space Research Organization Satellite Integration and Test Establishment (ISITE) at the ISRO headquarters in Bengaluru, India, on Tuesday, June 12, 2019. India will launch a lunar mission on July 15, attempting to become the fourth country to land on the moon and cementing its place among the world's space faring nations. Photographer: Karen Dias/Bloomberg

India would have been the fourth country to complete a lunar soft landing

Space is a difficult terrain to conquer, and the lunar surface lays polluted with failed attempts. These failures are mostly attributed to the lack of atmosphere on the moon, which renders parachutes useless. The landers are left solely at the mercy of thrusters to cushion the landing. The difficulty can be evaluated from the fact that had the landing been successful. India would have been only the fourth country to complete a lunar soft landing - with the former Soviet Union, the US, and China having achieved it thus far - and the first to do so on the lunar South Pole.

K. Sivan, Indian Space Research Organizations chairman stated that"Vikram lander descent was as planned and normal performance was observed till the altitude of 2.1 km. Subsequently, the communication from the lander to the ground station was lost. The data is being analyzed,CNN reported.

Not a complete failure

The mission, however, was not a complete failure. Chandrayaan-2, a $140 million mission, partially intends to study the possibility of water deposits further within the moon carters, first highlighted by Chandrayaan-1 in 2008. The 142-foot tall spacecraft that blasted off the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Andhra Pradesh on the 15th July, under this mission carried an orbiter, the Vikram lunar lander, and a six-wheeled rover. The orbiter that had detached from the lander earlier this week can expectedly continue to operate for about seven years. The failure of the Vikram lander, interestingly, comes, just months after Indias close ally Israel's first moon mission, Beresheet, met a similar fate.

But unlike Beresheet, Chandrayaan-2's mission still lives on in the orbiter that will continue to orbit the moon, albeit alone. Tentative plans for Chandrayaan-3, indicate a third mission to the moon in 2024. Like Chandrayaan-2, it too is expected to contain a moon rover.

ISRO has come a long way!

While the price tag of failure seems heavy on the paper, it is important to mention here that the ISRO has come a long way in specialized low-costing space launches since the early 1960s, when the components assembled by hand and transported via bicycles. ISROs maiden interplanetary mission, with the launch of the Mars orbiter in 2013 cost just $74 million, a remarkable nine times cheaper than what NASA could manage in the same year. The cost-effectiveness allowed ISRO to launch a record 104 satellites in under 18 minutes, in 2017.

Earlier this year, ISRO stated that it intends to have its operational space station soon, to allow conducting separate missions to study the Sun and Venus. Work on the space station is expected to begin following ISROs first manned space mission, coined Gaganyaan (Sanskrit for space vehicle), to which the government has allotted $1.5 billion. The Gaganyaan purpose is set to stage in 2022, just in time to celebrate 75 years of Indian independence from Britain.

Indias attempt to make the history by becoming the fourth nation to land on the Moon failed. After journeying millions of kilometers and coming excruciatingly close, the lander lost the contact in the last few hundred meters, crash landing on the lunar surface. However, ISRO has still not admitted defeat and they will try connecting to Vikram for the next two weeks more.

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Chandrayaan 2: India's Moon Mission - A Failure or Not - Forbes

Boeing: International Space Station

NASA is working with its partners and suppliers to design and develop the Gateway, a moon-orbiting outpost that will serve as a base for human and robotic expeditions on the moon, and for future missions to Mars. The U.S. presidential administrations goal of boots on the moon in 2024 relies on the Gateway.

Boeings Gateway concept builds on the companys experience from designing, building and operating the ISS for more than 20 years. Boeing is working on a habitation module, an airlock module (which doubles as additional living/work space), and a Power Propulsion Element (PPE) derived from the successful 702 line of Boeing satellites.

Launched aboard rockets including NASAs Space Launch System, these Gateway modules and others would connect with one another in lunar orbit using NASAs Orion capsule or a space tug. Following astronauts return to the moons surface via a lunar lander, the Gateway will become a hub for continuing missions to the moon and Mars for NASA, its international partners, and private companies.

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Boeing: International Space Station

Space Station – Unique Properties, Loft Apartments, Penthouses

Unique Properties, Loft Apartments, Penthouses | Space Station

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Tiangong-1 – Wikipedia

Tiangong-1 (Chinese: ; pinyin: Tingng yho; literally: "Heavenly Palace 1" or "Celestial Palace 1") was China's first prototype space station.[9] It orbited Earth from September 2011 to April 2018, serving as both a manned laboratory and an experimental testbed to demonstrate orbital rendezvous and docking capabilities during its two years of active operational life.[10]

Launched unmanned aboard a Long March 2F/G rocket[1] on 29 September 2011,[11] it was the first operational component of the Tiangong program, which aims to place a larger, modular station into orbit by 2023.[10][12] Tiangong-1 was initially projected to be deorbited in 2013,[13] to be replaced over the following decade by the larger Tiangong-2 and Tiangong-3 modules,[14] but it orbited until 2 April 2018.[3][4][5][15][16]

Tiangong-1 was visited by a series of Shenzhou spacecraft during its two-year operational lifetime. The first of these, the unmanned Shenzhou 8, successfully docked with the module in November 2011,[17][18] while the manned Shenzhou 9 mission docked in June 2012.[19][20][21] A third and final mission to Tiangong-1, the manned Shenzhou 10, docked in June 2013.[22][23][24] The manned missions to Tiangong-1 were notable for including China's first female astronauts, Liu Yang and Wang Yaping.[23][25]

On 21 March 2016, after a lifespan extended by two years, the China Manned Space Engineering Office announced that Tiangong-1 had officially ended its service.[26][27] They went on to state that the telemetry link with Tiangong-1 had been lost.[28] A couple of months later, amateur satellite trackers watching Tiangong-1 found that China's space agency had lost control of the station.[28] In September, after conceding they had lost control over the station, officials speculated that the station would re-enter and burn up in the atmosphere late in 2017.[29][30] According to the China Manned Space Engineering Office, Tiangong-1 started reentry over the southern Pacific Ocean, northwest of Tahiti, on 2 April 2018 at 00:15 UTC.[4][5][15][16]

The China National Space Administration (CNSA) designed Tiangong-1 as an 8.5-tonne (19,000lb) "space-laboratory module", capable of supporting the docking of manned and autonomous spacecraft. In 2008, the China Manned Space Engineering Office (CMSEO) released a brief description of Tiangong-1, along with its larger successor modules, Tiangong-2 and Tiangong-3. A model of the space station was revealed in the Chinese Lunar New Year celebration program on CCTV on 25 January 2009.[31]

On 29 September 2008, Zhang Jianqi (), vice-director of the CMSEO, declared in an interview with China Central Television (CCTV)[32] that Tiangong-1 would be launched in 2010 or 2011. Xinhua later stated that Tiangong-1 would be launched in late 2010, and declared that the renovation of ground equipment was in progress.[33] However, the launch did not ultimately take place until 2011.

By mid-2011, the construction of Tiangong-1 was complete, and its systems and thermal properties were undergoing testing. Testing was also conducted on the Long March 2F carrier rocket on which Tiangong-1 would be launched; technicians undertook particularly extensive safety tests on the rocket in August and September 2011,[11] following the launch failure of a Long March 2C rocket on 18 August.[34]

Tiangong-1 had a pressurised habitable volume of approximately 15 cubic metres (530cuft), and used passive APAS-type docking connectors.[35]Structurally, Tiangong-1 was divided into two primary sections: a resource module, which mounted its solar panels and propulsion systems, and a larger, habitable experimental module.[36]

Tiangong-1's experimental module was equipped with exercise gear and two sleep stations.[7] The interior walls of the spacecraft had a two-color paint scheme one color representative of the ground, and the other representative of the sky. This was intended to help the astronauts maintain their orientation in zero gravity.[7] High-resolution interior cameras allowed manned missions to be closely monitored from the ground, and the two sleep stations had individual lighting controls.[37] Toilet facilities and cooking equipment for the manned missions were provided by the docked Shenzhou spacecraft, rather than being integrated into the Tiangong module itself.[37] Similarly, one member of the module's three-person crew slept in the Shenzhou spacecraft, preventing overcrowding.[37]

Tiangong-1 was originally intended to be launched in August 2011, and was delivered to the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on 23 July, successfully passing a launch rehearsal test on 17 August.[38] However, following the failed launch of a Long March 2C rocket in August 2011, the launch was postponed. Following an investigation into the August launch failure,[11][39] Tiangong-1's launch was rescheduled for late September 2011,[40] partly to coincide with the Chinese National Day on 1 October.[41]

On 20 September 2011, the spacecraft was again rolled out to Pad 1 of the South Launch Site at Jiuquan in preparation for the rescheduled launch attempt.[42] The launch occurred at 13:16 UTC on 29 September, successfully placing Tiangong-1 into low Earth orbit.[38] Chinese television broadcast the launch animation accompanied by an instrumental version of the American patriotic song America the Beautiful, a choice of music for which it later offered no explanation.[43]

On 30 September 2011, Tiangong-1 completed the second of two orbital transfer maneuvers, reaching an apogee altitude of 355 kilometres (221mi)[44] . This was the precursor to a week-long program of orbital testing, conducted from the Beijing Aerospace Command and Control Center, to prepare the module for future orbital docking operations.[44] On 10 October, Tiangong-1 released its first orbital photo, showing a view of its outer hull and satellite relay antenna.[45]

The unmanned Shenzhou 8 mission successfully docked with Tiangong-1 on 2 November 2011 GMT, marking China's first orbital docking.[17] Shenzhou 8 undocked from Tiangong-1 on 14 November, before successfully completing a second rendezvous and docking, thus testing the reusability of the docking system.[18][46][47] Shenzhou 8 deorbited on 17 November 2011, and landed intact in Siziwang Banner in Inner Mongolia.[48] After the mission, the CNSA reported that Tiangong-1's systems were in optimal condition.[49]

In December 2011, the Tiangong-1 module began automated internal checks for toxic gas, to ensure that its interior would be safe for astronauts to enter.[50] In January 2012, reports emerged alleging that the American X-37B robotic spaceplane was shadowing Tiangong-1 for surveillance purposes.[51] However, former United States Air Force orbital analyst Brian Weeden later refuted this claim, emphasizing that the X-37B occupied a different orbit from Tiangong-1, and would not be able to closely observe the module.[52]

In March 2012, it was reported that China had finished the initial crew selection for the Shenzhou 9 mission. Niu Hongguang, the deputy chief commander of the China Manned Space Engineering Project, stated that Shenzhou 9 would dock with Tiangong-1 before August 2012.[53] The Shenzhou 9 spacecraft was delivered to Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center for launch preparations on 9 April 2012,[54] while its Long March 2F carrier rocket arrived a month later on 9 May.[55]

Shenzhou 9 launched successfully on 16 June 2012, carrying with it China's first female astronaut, Liu Yang.[19][21][25][56] The spacecraft docked with Tiangong-1 on 18 June 2012 at 14:07 Beijing time (06:07 GMT; 07:07 BST).[20] After about three hours, when the air pressures inside the two vessels were equalized, mission commander Jing Haipeng entered Tiangong-1.[57]The first docking was entirely computer-controlled, without input from the three astronauts;[20] a second, crew-guided docking was successfully conducted on 24 June 2012 at 12:42 Beijing time.[58] Shenzhou 9 landed safely in Inner Mongolia on 29 June 2012.[59] In August 2012, Shenzhou 9's crew travelled to Hong Kong to discuss their mission with university students.[60]

The manned Shenzhou 10 spacecraft, the final Shenzhou mission to rendezvous with Tiangong-1 before its deorbit, was launched on 11 June 2013.[22][23][61] The launch of Shenzhou 10 was originally planned for earlier in the year, but was delayed to allow the mission to incorporate more complex scientific experiments.[62] The mission's crew included China's second female astronaut, Wang Yaping.[23] Shenzhou 10 docked successfully with Tiangong-1 on 13 June.[24]

On 15 June 2013, the Shenzhou 10 crew completed China's first orbital maintenance operation, replacing Tiangong-1's interior cladding.[63] Additional maintenance work was conducted on the space station's seal rings.[63] On 20 June, Wang Yaping delivered a remote video lecture from orbit to students across China, demonstrating physics in microgravity with her colleagues.[64] On 24 June, CPC general secretary Xi Jinping contacted the astronauts via remote video link to congratulate them.[65] After a series of successful docking tests, Shenzhou 10 undocked and returned safely to Earth on 26 June 2013.[66] With a duration of 15 days, Shenzhou 10 was China's longest manned space mission,[67] until Shenzhou 11's 30-day mission to Tiangong-2 in 2016.[68]

The Tiangong-1 was launched in September 2011, with an intended service span of two years. After the last crew departed the module in June 2013, it was put into sleep mode. It was intended that it would remain in orbit for some time, allowing China to collect data on the longevity of key components before being commanded to gradually re-enter the atmosphere. The Permanent Mission of China to the United Nations informed the Committee on the Peaceful Use of Outer Space that the Tiangong-1 had ceased functioning on 16 March 2016.[69] On 21 March 2016, the Manned Space Engineering Office announced that they had disabled data service, since the space station had operated two-and-a-half years longer than its intended two-year service plan. According to the office, the space laboratory was under continued and close monitoring until it finally burned up in the Earth's atmosphere during an uncontrolled re-entry.[26][27]

The orbit of Tiangong-1 was decaying gradually, and the space laboratory was predicted to be destroyed upon re-entry into Earth's atmosphere.[71][72][73]

At the request of China and the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC), led by the European Space Agency (ESA), conducted an international campaign to monitor the re-entry of Tiangong-1. ESA's Space Debris Office in Darmstadt, Germany hosted and administered the campaign, with participation from other space agencies and organizations including the China National Space Administration, the Indian Space Research Organisation, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, the Korea Aerospace Research Institute, and Roscosmos.[74] The IADC predicted that Tiangong-1 would break up during re-entry, but that parts of the station would survive and fall to the Earth's surface, potentially falling across an area thousands of kilometres long and tens of kilometres wide. However, because most of the re-entry area was ocean or uninhabited land, the IADC stated that the odds of a person being hit by falling debris to be "10 million times smaller than the yearly chance of being hit by lightning."[70] The IADC's final prediction before re-entry was that Tiangong-1 would re-enter at around 01:00 UTC on 2 April 2018, plus or minus 2 hours, falling somewhere on Earth between 42.8 North and 42.8 South latitudes,[75][76] with the most likely re-entry sites being at the north and south extremes of that range. This is because the station's high-inclination orbit had the smallest north-south speed at the extreme latitudes, and the greatest north-south speed near the Equator.[70]

Independently, the non-profit Aerospace Corporation's Center for Orbital and Re-entry Debris Studies (CORDS) predicted that Tiangong-1 would most likely re-enter the atmosphere around 00:30 UTC on 2 April 2018, plus or minus 1.7 hours. CORDS scientists also predicted that it would re-enter somewhere between the 42.7 North and 42.7 South latitudes, a range that covered two-thirds of the Earth's surface, with a high likelihood of an ocean landing of whatever did not burn up during re-entry.[77] They predicted that if any parts of the station survived re-entry, the small amount of debris would impact the ground over an area a few hundred square kilometers in size.[78] The final prediction of likely areas for debris impact covered southern South America, Africa, the Middle East, and central Asia.[78][79] However, even in those high-probability areas, they still estimated the odds of a specific person being hit by debris to be "about one million times smaller than the odds of winning the Powerball jackpot."[80]

Tiangong-1 reentered the Earth's atmosphere at approximately 00:16 UTC on 2 April 2018 over the South Pacific Ocean at 2430S 15106W / 24.5S 151.1W / -24.5; -151.1.[4][78] According to Chinese state news agency Xinhua, the station mostly burnt up upon re-entry.[81] It was the largest spacecraft to re-enter the atmosphere since Fobos-Grunt in January 2012.[70] This was about 3,600 kilometres (1,900nmi) from Point Nemo, a location often used as a spacecraft cemetery to crash defunct satellites.[82] As the spacecraft made an uncontrolled reentry, this was unintended coincidence.

Tiangong-1 was designed as a test bed for key technologies later used on another test station called Tiangong-2, which was launched on 15 September 2016.[84] Both experimental space stations are short-lived and meant to test technologies and systems for a permanent future space station called Chinese large modular space station, which is planned to be assembled from 2019 to 2022.[85]

The design of Tianzhou, an automated cargo spacecraft intended to resupply the Chinese large modular space station, is based on Tiangong-1.[14][86]

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Real time satellite tracking for: SPACE STATION

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Space Station 13 | The official website for Space Station 13

Space Station 13 is a community developed, multiplayer round-based role playing game, where players assume the role of a crewmember on a space station. Together they must keep the station running smoothly, whilst dealing with antagonistic forces who threaten to sabotage the mission.

At the beginning of each round, players select a crew member role on the station. These range from high up positions like the captain and heads of staff, to engineers, scientists, medical doctors, security officers, all the way down to the lower responsibility roles such as the janitor and lowly assistant. At round start, one or more players will be given an antagonistic role at random, and a secret objective thats very likely to cause disruption to the mission at hand.

When the crew arent turning on each other through sheer paranoia, they will face various dangers depending on the round: Sleeper agents hell bent on sabotage, shape-shifting aliens, RPG toting syndicate operatives and more. Not to mention the occupational hazards of working in space, such as decompression, meteor showers, radiation storms, airlock mishaps, rogue AI and catastrophic engine failure.

See more here:

Space Station 13 | The official website for Space Station 13